The Portal November 2018 | Page 18

THE P RTAL November 2018 Page 18 The Ordinariate’s first Ad Limina visit A report by Mgr Keith Newton on the September visit T he Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum coetibus, published by the Holy See in November 2009, set out the structures for an Ordinariate. Soon afterwards, an eminent Anglican ecclesiastical lawyer commented that the fact that the Ordinary had to visit Rome every five years to report on the state of the Ordinariate showed that the Ordinariates were not equal to other structures in the Catholic Church. If he had read the 1983 Code of Canon Law, he would have realised that the opposite is true. The Code states (can. 399 §1): “Every five years the diocesan bishop is bound submit to the Supreme Pontiff a report on the state of the diocese entrusted to him, in the form and at the time determined by the Apostolic See.” It goes on to say (can. 400 §1): “In the year in which he is bound to submit a report to the Supreme Pontiff, the diocesan bishop is to go to Rome to venerate the tombs of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul and to present himself to the Roman Pontiff.” This is the Ad Limina Apostolorum visit to Rome.   The previous Ad Limina visit of the members of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales was in 2010, before the erection of the first Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. As there has been a change of papacy and because of the Year of Mercy, it was eight years since the last Ad Limina visit. All the bishops of England and Wales took part together with the bishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church and the Eparch of the Syro-Malabar Church. the Clergy. Other visits were optional and I chose to visit the Congregation for Oriental Churches as I have a particular interest in the parallels between the Oriental Churches and the Ordinariate within the Catholic Church. I also visited the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and was delighted to hear the progress of the cause for the canonisation of Blessed John Henry Newman, who may be canonised in the not too distant future. Those who have been on previous Ad Liminas commented on a change of attitude in the meetings with the dicasteries. In the past, I am told, the prefect or the secretary would speak for an hour with very little interaction. On this occasion, there was, in most cases, a greater opportunity to discuss matters and The words Ad Limina Apostolorum mean “at the raise questions and concerns which are relevant to threshold of the apostles.” At the centre of the visit was Catholic life here in the United Kingdom. One prefect, the celebration Mass at the tombs of the Apostles Peter the person in charge of that particular dicastery, and Paul, who are buried beneath the great basilicas remarked that in the past the bishops were often which bear their names. As well as these liturgical frightened on such visits and now it is the other way events, members of the Conference visited various round. Obviously this was said tongue in cheek, but it dicasteries or departments of the Roman Curia. did reflect an important change in approach.  There were also two members not in episcopal orders, but with jurisdictions within the Catholic Church: Abbot Hugh Allan, the Apostolic Administrator of the Falkland Islands, and me, as Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham.  All members had to visit certain dicasteries, including the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, the Congregation for Education, the Congregation for Bishops and the Congregation for I was particularly pleased that the Ordinariate was recognised and mentioned in several of our visits. I expected that to be so at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith which has particular responsibility for the three Ordinariates around the Ø