The Portal Archive June 2011 | Página 8

ragon THE P RTAL June 2011 Page 8 North/South Divide? There are those who think that the north of England begins at Watford. Some also who believe all northerners wear flat caps and keep pigeons. “EE BY GUM”. Those of us who have lived there know better. There are no lovelier sights than the Yorkshire Dales, the Trough of Bowland or Morecambe Bay as the sun is setting. Some too of our finest churches and cathedrals (Durham, York, and Southwell) are in the Northern Province. And as for things to visit - have you recently been to Manchester to enjoy the open air metro link, the Lowry exhibition, and the hidden gem of St Anne’s Square? the north going to be given special treatment from the General Synod? Will exceptions be made for them? Answer, no way. Can you imagine someone in Synod proposing an amendment to the effect that northern parishes are allowed to keep their resolutions and PEV? “Ee by gum”, that would be a miracle.  Yesterday’s battles Is there still more anti-Rome feeling in the north than the south? All those Irish labourers coming over here in the last century to Liverpool and elsewhere to take all the jobs - you know how the argument goes. Certainly the old days were divisive, typified by those Whit Walks held on separate days. But if Northern Ireland can move on, so should we. What mileage in fighting yesterday’s battles? The saints of the north are rightly our heroes: Aidan, Chad, Cuthbert. How would they have reacted to the Pope’s offer to Anglicans? We have the answer at least with Cuthbert. “The unity of the catholic peace” Celt though he was, religious hermit though he was, he was careful on his death bed to exhort his monks to join the new movement from Rome. “The unity of the catholic peace” he said, was more important than anything else.  This unity is at the heart of any response to the Pope’s offer. If that is your prime concern, whether you live in the leafy south, or in those northern parts beyond Watford, come and join the Ordinariate. Contact the Ordinary, Monsignor Keith Newton. By the way, he comes from the north of England. He is a Liverpudlian. The Pope knows a good northerner when he sees one! So why, with all the good northern stuff around, has not the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham drawn more clergy and laity from the north to its ranks?  The patronage cannot be an issue. Northerners have been foremost over the years in pilgrimages to Walsingham, and if Cardinal Newman, ending up in Birmingham, was not quite in the north, it is near enough! There must be other issues here. Special treatment? One question to ask. Are clergy and congregations in