The Portal Archive December 2011 | Page 16

THE P RTAL December 2011 Page 12 The Anglo-Saxon Saints: Models of Sanctity for the Ordinariate in the UK by Harry Schnitker During his visit to the UK in 2011, the Holy Father urged all to strive to be saints of the twenty-first century. What does this mean, and, in particular, what does it mean for the Ordinariate here in the UK? One could argue that there would not be an Ordinariate without a saint, Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman. Blessed John Henry Newman Fittingly, Blessed John Henry was beatified by the Pope who also opened the doors to those Anglicans who wished to follow Newman’s example, but who also wished to stay loyal to the cultural and spiritual treasures of their Anglican roots. We are called to be saints by the Holy Father, who echoed the Second Vatican Council. For the young Ordinariate, seeking to establish its own identity, this can mean looking for saints who shaped its Anglican roots. Christian culture great victory over the French armies at Agincourt implemented a deliberate policy to create an English national-Catholic identity. Shakespeare picked up on this, his antennae sensitised by the nationalisation of religion under his Tudor masters. In Act III of his play, Henry V, written in 1598, the bard has Henry proclaim: And you, good yeoman, Whose limbs were made in England, show us here The mettle of your pasture; let us swear That you are worth your breeding; which I doubt not … The game’s afoot: Follow your spirit, and upon this charge Cry ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint George!’ Almost inevitably, this means the saints of the Anglo-Saxon period. This is not to say that other saints are not important. One could argue that some of the so-called Celtic saints were crucial in creating English Catholicism. Yet where these saints laboured in Anglo-Saxon regions, they soon became part of an easily identifiable Christian culture. St Chad in Lichfield may have come from an ancient British – king, country and Faith Welsh – family, but his work and influence were part of Anglo-Saxon Christianity. The link between king, country and Faith is explicit, as it was in Henry’s own day. A year after his great St Thomas Becket victory, in 1416, he ordered the renewed inclusion on Later saints, who were part of the post-1066 the English calendar of a host of Anglo-Saxon saints Normanised English kingdom, rarely exercised the long forgotten. same influence, although one would have to recall the exceptional figure of St Thomas Becket as a salutary He also ensured that the Use of Sarum, still central to warning against over-simplification. Equally, the the liturgical tradition of Anglicanism, was extended valiant men and women who clung to their Faith after to wherever the English Church held sway. Henry the English Reformation and died as a result were VIII built upon this model, and stuck to it after the important, but not as essential to an Anglican identity break with Rome. Here are the origins of the Anglican as their Anglo-Saxon precursors. tradition, constructed in the later Middle Ages as England found its national identity, but with its roots Henry V amongst the very people that propagated the Faith in The centrality of the Anglo-Saxon saints to an England. St Bede, that great Anglo-Saxon saint and Anglican identity rests largely on the man who did scholar, could not conceive of the English and their more to shape English national awareness than anyone Church as anything but inseparable, and would have prior to the Tudors: Henry V. The protagonist of the approved of Henry V’s policy.