{"id":12310,"date":"2011-11-21T15:31:27","date_gmt":"2011-11-21T21:31:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/?p=12310"},"modified":"2011-11-21T19:25:37","modified_gmt":"2011-11-22T01:25:37","slug":"the-anglican-bishop-of-london-on-the-eucharist","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/index.php\/2011\/11\/21\/the-anglican-bishop-of-london-on-the-eucharist\/","title":{"rendered":"The Anglican Bishop of London on the Eucharist"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>A recent pastoral letter from Richard Chartres, Bishop of London entitled<a href=\"http:\/\/communications.london.anglican.org\/ministrymatters\/2011\/11\/do-this-in-remembrance-of-me-eucharistic-pastoral-letter\/\"> &#8216;Do This in Memory of Me&#8217;<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>The whole is worth a read, but perhaps some paragraphs towards the end are particularly significant:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Our part of the Church is not alone in having spent a great deal of  effort on liturgical reform. At Advent, our brothers and sisters in the  Roman Catholic Church will be required to use new liturgical texts. We  can always learn from the example of other members of the Christian  community and indeed our own liturgy has been reformed by reference to  the testimony and practices of the Church of the first centuries.<\/p>\n<p>In former times before the liturgies of our Church had fully  recovered these early forms, some of our priests adopted the Roman rite  as a sign of fidelity to the ancient common tradition and an expression  of our unity in Christ. At best their intention was to contribute to the  recovery of a tradition which is both Catholic and Reformed, while  pointing the way to the liturgical convergence we now enjoy, not least  through the work of the international English Language Liturgical  Consultation. They also recognised the proper place in the liturgy of  prayer for leaders in the world wide church in addition to our own  Archbishop. This is especially true of the Pope, who is undeniably the  Patriarch of the West and as head of the Roman Catholic Church is  charged with awesome pastoral and missionary responsibilities.<\/p>\n<p>Much has been achieved and the debates of previous generations have  influenced the Church\u2019s liturgical practice and contributed to a  convergence of eucharistic doctrine and rites. So it is with some dismay  that I have learned of the intentions of some clergy in the Diocese to  follow instructions which have been addressed to the Roman Catholic  Church and to adopt the new Roman eucharistic rites at Advent.<\/p>\n<p>The Pope has recently issued an invitation to Anglicans to move into  full communion with the See of Rome in the Ordinariate where it is  possible to enjoy the \u201cAnglican patrimony\u201d as full members of the Roman  Catholic Church. Three priests in the Diocese have taken this step. They  have followed their consciences.<\/p>\n<p>For those who remain there can be no logic in the claim to be  offering the Eucharist in communion with the Roman Church which the  adoption of the new rites would imply. In these rites there is not only a  prayer for the Pope but the expression of a communion with him; a  communion Pope Benedict XVI would certainly repudiate.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time rather than building on the hard won convergence of  liturgical texts, the new Roman rite varies considerably from its  predecessor and thus from Common Worship as well. The rationale for the  changes is that the revised texts represent a more faithful translation  of the Latin originals and are a return to more traditional language.<\/p>\n<p>Priests and parishes which do adopt the new rites \u2013 with their marked  divergences from the ELLC texts and in the altered circumstances  created by the Pope\u2019s invitation to Anglicans to join the Ordinariate \u2013  are making a clear statement of their disassociation not only from the  Church of England but from the Roman Communion as well. This is a  pastoral unkindness to the laity and a serious canonical matter. The  clergy involved have sworn oaths of canonical obedience as well as  making their Declaration of Assent. I urge them not to create further  disunity by adopting the new rites.<\/p>\n<p>There will be no persecution and no creation of ritual martyrs but at  the same time there will be no opportunity to claim that the Bishop\u2019s  directions have been unclear. All the bishops of the Diocese when  visiting parishes will celebrate according to the rites of the Church of  England allowing for permitted local variations under Canon B5.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>They do things differently in that part of the Church. For a Catholic response, perhaps less careful theologically than it should be but broadly sympathetic, see <a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicherald.co.uk\/commentandblogs\/2011\/11\/21\/the-bishop-of-london-is-right-about-anglicans-using-the-roman-rite\/\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<div style=\"width: 1px; height: 1px; overflow: hidden;\">\n<h1 class=\"entry-title\">Do this in remembrance of me<\/h1>\n<div class=\"post-info\"><span class=\"date published time\" title=\"2011-11-18T14:56:53+0000\">18 November 2011<\/span> By <span class=\"author vcard\"><span class=\"fn\"><a title=\"Posts by The Bishop of London\" rel=\"author\" href=\"http:\/\/communications.london.anglican.org\/ministrymatters\/author\/bishopoflondon\/\">The Bishop of London<\/a><\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<p>(<a href=\"http:\/\/communications.london.anglican.org\/ministrymatters\/?p=8156&amp;aid=8159&amp;pid=8156&amp;sa=0\">Download this as a pdf<\/a>)<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-8164\" src=\"http:\/\/communications.london.anglican.org\/ministrymatters\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/11\/Bishop-of-London-portrait.jpg\" alt=\"The Bishop of London\" width=\"150\" height=\"226\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Dietrich Bonhoeffer in his \u201c<em>Ethics<\/em>\u201d frames what he believed  is the leading question for the Church in every age, \u201chow may Christ  take form among us today and here\u201d? That form should be consonant with  the apostolic teaching and the faith uniquely revealed in the Holy  Scriptures. It should also be engaged with present reality in order to  discharge the responsibility of the Church to set forward the claims of  the gospel \u201cafresh\u201d for this generation.<\/p>\n<p>This return to the sources and responsibility towards the present is  all for the sake of the coming of the Kingdom for which Jesus prays in  the Lord\u2019s Prayer. In the power of the Spirit we are enrolled in opening  a fissure in the consciousness of our world so that the future, which  God intends, can exert its transforming influence on present reality.<\/p>\n<p>The New Testament describes a community which rehearses the past and  engages with the present for the sake of the coming Kingdom. Admission  to this community is through baptism. Jesus said \u2013 \u201cTherefore go and  make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father  and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit and teaching them to obey  everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always to the  very end of the age.\u201d [Matthew XXVIII: 19-end]<\/p>\n<p>The risen Jesus also demonstrated the action that was to be at the  very heart of his community by revealing himself to the travellers on  the road to Emmaus as they ate bread together. The community is  nourished by Christ\u2019s own body and blood which is really present when we  enact the last supper which he shared with his friends on the night in  which he was betrayed. Among the very few commandments that he gave to  us is \u201cDo this in remembrance of me\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>As the community celebrates the liturgy so we are built up into the  body through which Christ can engage with our times. We re-member him in  a dynamic sense. We do not merely recall his teaching and appearing  long ago and far away. We re-member him among us amidst the  dis-membering forces of our world. We become \u201cvery members\u201d of the body  of Christ and members one of another. The truth is that Christ  \u201cre-members\u201d us as a community in which all other distinctions are  transcended by our new life in Christ.<\/p>\n<p>The Eucharist is performative and not merely illustrative. \u201cWe take  not Baptism nor the Eucharist for bare resemblances or memorials of  things absent, neither for naked signs and testimonies assuring us of  grace received before but for means effectual whereby God, when we take  the sacraments, delivereth into our hands that grace available unto  eternal life.\u201d [Richard Hooker <em>Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity<\/em> V: 57.]<\/p>\n<p>It is by this grace that the Eucharist builds the Church. The Holy  Communion is not something the church \u201cputs on\u201d to cater for our  \u201creligious\u201d needs and feelings. It is the way appointed by Christ in  which the world itself is \u201cre-membered\u201d through the growth of his body.<\/p>\n<p>Christians have in the past argued about precisely how this happens.  Polemics in the 16th century centred on various attempted explanations  of how the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist was communicated.<\/p>\n<p>When questioned about her beliefs on the Eucharist in the reign of her sister Mary, the Princess Elizabeth simply replied:-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cChrist was the Word that spake it,<br \/>\nHe took the bread and brake it:<br \/>\nAnd what his words did make it<br \/>\nThat I believe and take it.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Others, however, wanted to define the mystery more narrowly. In an  age when Aristotle\u2019s analysis of objects in the physical world as being  composed of \u201cessences and accidents\u201d was widely accepted,  transubstantiation was seen to have value as a picture of how the  eucharistic elements were transformed. In the <em>Windsor Agreed Statement<\/em> which emerged from the first series of international discussions  between Anglican and Roman Catholic theologians, transubstantiation  appears only in a footnote as \u201caffirming the fact of Christ\u2019s presence  and of the mysterious and radical change which takes place. In  contemporary Roman Catholic theology it is not understood as explaining  how the change takes place.\u201d This focus on the universal belief of the  Christian community since the earliest times whilst avoiding over  definition of the mystery is a contemporary re-statement of the teaching  of Richard Hooker.<\/p>\n<p>The Windsor Statement established a good deal of common ground on the  Christian understanding of the sacrament which was reinforced by the  Lima texts emanating from the Faith and Order Commission of the World  Council of Churches in 1982.<\/p>\n<p>The Eucharist is celebrated in many different ways and the various  names in common use indicate contrasting emphases. But for all of us the  Eucharistic liturgy is a meaningful statement to the world of who we  are and hope to become.<\/p>\n<p>The word \u201cliturgy\u201d is derived from the practice of Greek City States  in Jesus Christ\u2019s own day. Public liturgies were undertaken at the  command of civic authority. Citizens were assembled typically in order  to build a road or a temple.<\/p>\n<p>Our liturgy is one which arises from the command of Jesus Christ, \u201cDo  this in remembrance of me\u201d not in order to build a temple made with  hands but to build his body which the gospel writers say has replaced  the physical temple.<\/p>\n<p>It follows from all this that obeying his command is an integral part  of Christian discipleship. In this context there are a number of  aspects of our own church life which deserve urgent consideration at the  present time.<\/p>\n<p>In some parts of our church it can appear that the service of Holy  Communion is an appendix to services of the Word and not accorded the  central significance which the express command of Jesus would seem to  warrant. The reformers of our own church, Cranmer and Ridley [as Bishop  of London] desired more frequent communion than was the practice in the  late mediaeval Western church. Calvin also commends weekly eucharistic  practice in his <em>Institutes<\/em> [IV: xvii. 46], \u201cAt least once in  every week the table of the Lord ought to have been spread before each  congregation of Christians.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Despite the teaching of the early Reformers their intention was  overtaken later in the 16th century by a near exclusive focus in some  parts of the church on the ministry of the Word.<\/p>\n<p>The recent conclusion of more than twenty years work has resulted in a  wealth of provision for celebrating the liturgy. Styles will differ in  tune with the culture of different parishes and communities and  provision has been made for rich variety but there should be a common  core and not least our celebrations of the Eucharist on Sunday, the Day  of Resurrection.<\/p>\n<p>The Eucharist builds the church while at the same time establishing  her unity with Christ and with other parts of the One Holy Catholic and  Apostolic Church to which we, as members of the Church of England, claim  to belong. We know of course that the church is fragmented as a result  of human sin. The one Church for which Jesus prayed was present in the  Upper Room and it is also our destiny. The One Church belongs to God\u2019s  future and prayer and work for Christian unity is not an optional hobby  for ecumenical enthusiasts but an integral part of our prayer for the  coming of the Kingdom.<\/p>\n<p>A Diocese represents a developed form of the local church in which  all the fullness of Christian truth and life is present. Through the  bishop the local church strives for communion with the Church throughout  the whole world. Within an individual local church one of the ways in  which unity is established is by celebrating the Eucharist in every case  in solidarity with the bishop. In the Diocese of London that means  offering every Eucharist in communion with the Diocesan Bishop and the  appropriate Area Bishop.<\/p>\n<p>Remembering the bishop by name in prayer during the celebration of  the communion is more than an act of charity [though it is of course  never less than that] but it is an action which strengthens and embodies  the unity of the church to act together in the service of the gospel.  There is always a tendency especially for flourishing parish churches to  retreat into introversion. But the disturbances in the summer showed us  how much this Diocese needs and longs for the solidarity of the  Eucharistic fellowship \u2013 rich with poor, young and old, thriving  congregation with those who struggle. We shall only be able to touch the  life of London in all its parts and in all its networks and structures  for the sake of Jesus Christ if we \u201cput on the lord Jesus Christ\u201d  together. [Romans XIII: 14]<\/p>\n<p>Power in the Church of England is mercifully dispersed. Few members  of our church pine for a clerical dictatorship but we owe those whom the  community has chosen as our pastors and whom the bishop has ordained as  ministers, the tribute of careful listening and attention.<\/p>\n<p>The responsibilities of bishops, priests and deacons are likewise to  listen deeply to the promptings of the Spirit expressed by fellow  members of the body especially those who are vulnerable and oppressed.  The London Challenge affirms that \u201cthe poor are our teachers\u201d. The  Sermon on the Mount teaches us that in discerning the will of God, the  proper perspective for Christians is from below.<\/p>\n<p>Our part of the Church is not alone in having spent a great deal of  effort on liturgical reform. At Advent, our brothers and sisters in the  Roman Catholic Church will be required to use new liturgical texts. We  can always learn from the example of other members of the Christian  community and indeed our own liturgy has been reformed by reference to  the testimony and practices of the Church of the first centuries.<\/p>\n<p>In former times before the liturgies of our Church had fully  recovered these early forms, some of our priests adopted the Roman rite  as a sign of fidelity to the ancient common tradition and an expression  of our unity in Christ. At best their intention was to contribute to the  recovery of a tradition which is both Catholic and Reformed, while  pointing the way to the liturgical convergence we now enjoy, not least  through the work of the international English Language Liturgical  Consultation. They also recognised the proper place in the liturgy of  prayer for leaders in the world wide church in addition to our own  Archbishop. This is especially true of the Pope, who is undeniably the  Patriarch of the West and as head of the Roman Catholic Church is  charged with awesome pastoral and missionary responsibilities.<\/p>\n<p>Much has been achieved and the debates of previous generations have  influenced the Church\u2019s liturgical practice and contributed to a  convergence of eucharistic doctrine and rites. So it is with some dismay  that I have learned of the intentions of some clergy in the Diocese to  follow instructions which have been addressed to the Roman Catholic  Church and to adopt the new Roman eucharistic rites at Advent.<\/p>\n<p>The Pope has recently issued an invitation to Anglicans to move into  full communion with the See of Rome in the Ordinariate where it is  possible to enjoy the \u201cAnglican patrimony\u201d as full members of the Roman  Catholic Church. Three priests in the Diocese have taken this step. They  have followed their consciences.<\/p>\n<p>For those who remain there can be no logic in the claim to be  offering the Eucharist in communion with the Roman Church which the  adoption of the new rites would imply. In these rites there is not only a  prayer for the Pope but the expression of a communion with him; a  communion Pope Benedict XVI would certainly repudiate.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time rather than building on the hard won convergence of  liturgical texts, the new Roman rite varies considerably from its  predecessor and thus from Common Worship as well. The rationale for the  changes is that the revised texts represent a more faithful translation  of the Latin originals and are a return to more traditional language.<\/p>\n<p>Priests and parishes which do adopt the new rites \u2013 with their marked  divergences from the ELLC texts and in the altered circumstances  created by the Pope\u2019s invitation to Anglicans to join the Ordinariate \u2013  are making a clear statement of their disassociation not only from the  Church of England but from the Roman Communion as well. This is a  pastoral unkindness to the laity and a serious canonical matter. The  clergy involved have sworn oaths of canonical obedience as well as  making their Declaration of Assent. I urge them not to create further  disunity by adopting the new rites.<\/p>\n<p>There will be no persecution and no creation of ritual martyrs but at  the same time there will be no opportunity to claim that the Bishop\u2019s  directions have been unclear. All the bishops of the Diocese when  visiting parishes will celebrate according to the rites of the Church of  England allowing for permitted local variations under Canon B5.<\/p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A recent pastoral letter from Richard Chartres, Bishop of London entitled &#8216;Do This in Memory of Me&#8217;.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":40,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"_wpas_customize_per_network":false},"categories":[13,41,19,1398],"tags":[1688],"class_list":["post-12310","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ecumenism","category-episcopalanglican-liturgy","category-mass","category-new-missal-implementation","tag-richard-chartres"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - 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