HolyCoast: Catholics May Get a Bunch of New Converts From the Anglican Church
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Sunday, October 25, 2009

Catholics May Get a Bunch of New Converts From the Anglican Church

Back when I was doing church insurance I took care of several disaffected Episcopal flocks that left the denomination and realigned with a more conservative group out of Africa. In each case the churches that left did so because of disputes over the ordination of gay clergy.

Now the traditionalists in the mother church in England may be leaving to join the Catholic church:
Bishop Hind said he would be "happy" to be reordained as a Catholic priest and said that divisions in Anglicanism could make it impossible to stay in the church.

He is the most senior Anglican to admit that he is prepared to accept the offer from the Pope, who shocked the Church of England last week when he paved the way for clergy to convert to Catholicism in large numbers.

In a further blow to the Archbishop of Canterbury's hopes of preventing the Anglican Communion from disintegrating, other bishops have cast doubt over its survival.

The Rt Rev John Broadhurst, the Bishop of Fulham, even claimed that "the Anglican experiment is over". He said it has been shown to be powerless to cope with the crises over gays and women bishops.

In one of the most significant developments since the Reformation, the Pope last week announced that a new structure would be set up to allow disaffected Anglicans to enter full communion with Rome, while maintaining parts of their Protestant heritage.

The move comes after secret talks between the Vatican and a group of senior Anglican bishops. Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was not informed of the meetings and his advisers even denied that they had taken place when the Sunday Telegraph broke the story last year.

Now Bishop Hind, the most senior traditionalist in the Church of England, has confirmed that he is willing to sacrifice his salary and palace residence to defect to the Catholic Church.

"This is a remarkable new step from the Vatican," he said. "At long last there are some choices for Catholics in the Church of England. I'd be happy to be reordained into the Catholic Church."

While the bishop stressed that this would depend on his previous ministry being recognised, he said that the divisions in the Anglican Communion could make it impossible to stay.

"How can the Church exist if bishops are not in full communion with each other," he said.

Conservative archbishops and bishops have broken ties with their liberal counterparts following the US Episcopal Church's consecration of Gene Robinson, the first openly gay bishop.
The Catholic Church in the U.S. has a lot of problems of its own, so I don't know if you'll see a wholesale move to Catholicism from the churches opposed to gay priests. Goodness only knows the Catholic church already has lots of those.

However, this could really weaken the mother church in England and therefore contribute to the ongoing decline of the Episcopal Church in the U.S. as conservative congregations look elsewhere for their spiritual leadership.

3 comments:

Cato said...

"gay priests. Goodness only knows the Catholic church already has lots of those." Rick, nice slam. So are we to characterize all religions by those who violate their precepts? If that's the case, there's no religion out there - none, worth joining - including yours.

Herman said...

And then these new converts can associate with a lot of the Gay priests. Good Lord, what a mess this is becoming and we are beginning to see it in more and more churches, it's not confined to just one denomination.

Anonymous said...

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