20th October 2009
I have spent this evening speaking to bishops, priests and lay people of the Traditional Anglican Communion in England, Africa, Australia, India, Canada, the United States and South America.
We are
profoundly moved by the generosity of the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI. He
offers in this Apostolic Constitution the means for Òformer Anglicans to enter
into the fullness of communion with the Catholic ChurchÓ. He hopes that we can
Òfind in this
canonical structure the opportunity to preserve those Anglican traditions
precious to us and consistent with the Catholic faithÓ. He then warmly states Òwe are happy
that these men and women bring with them their particular contributions to our
common life of faithÓ.
May I firstly state that this is
an act of great goodness on the part of the Holy Father. He has dedicated his
pontificate to the cause of unity.
It more than matches the dreams we dared to include in our petition of
two years ago. It more than
matches our prayers. In those two
years, we have become very conscious of the prayers of our friends in the
Catholic Church. Perhaps their
prayers dared to ask even more than ours.
While we await the full text of
the Apostolic Constitution, we are also moved by the pastoral nature of the
Notes issued today by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. My fellow bishops have indeed signed
the Catechism of the Catholic Church and made a statement about the ministry of
the Bishop of Rome, reflecting the words of Pope John Paul II in his letter ÒUt
Unum SintÓ.
Other Anglican groups have
indicated to the Holy See a similar desire and a similar acceptance of Catholic
faith. As Cardinal Levada has
indicated, this response to Anglican petitions is to be of a global character. It will now be for these groups to
forge a close cooperation, even where they transcend the existing boundaries of
the Anglican Communion.
Fortunately, the Statement issued
by the Archbishop of Canterbury reflects the understanding that we have gained
from him that he does not stand in our way, and understands the decisions that
we have reached. Both his reaction
and our petition are fruits of a century of prayer for Christian unity, a cause
that many times must have seemed forlorn.
We now express our gratitude to Archbishop Williams, and have regularly
assured him of our prayers. The
See of Augustine remains a focus of our pilgrim way, as it was in ages of faith
in the past.
I have made a commitment to the
Traditional Anglican Communion that the response of the Holy See will be taken
to each of our National Synods.
They have already endorsed our pathway. Now the Holy See challenges us to seek in the specific
structures that are now available the Òfull, visible unity, especially
Eucharistic communionÓ, for which we have long prayed and about which we have
long dreamed. That process will
begin at once.
In the Anglican Office of Morning
Prayer, the great Hymn of Thanksgiving, the Te Deum, is part of the daily
Order. It is with heartfelt thanks
to Almighty God, the Lord and Source of all peace and unity, that the hymn is
on our lips today. This is a
moment of grace, perhaps even a moment of history, not because the past is
undone, but because the past is transformed.
Archbishop John Hepworth
Primate