A West Australian friend has been
attending Sunday Mass at the Principal Church of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of
the Southern Cross for the last several weeks, ever since the happy day of the
reception into full communion of many incoming Anglicans, and the ordination to
the priesthood of their leader the new Ordinary, Monsignor Harry Entwistle, in
Perth last month.
For all interested readers, then,
here is an account – extracted over the telephone – from my correspondent (who
is himself a former Anglican, and thus particularly sympathetic to the
Ordinariate) of Mass in Perth this morning.
The Church of SS Ninian and Chad
(which I have peeped into myself some years ago) is quite small; it was full
for the 9.30 am Sunday Mass, which means a congregation of perhaps
seventy. As well as the
recently-arrived Ordinariate members, quite a number of other Catholics were in
attendance, including (I am told) some familiar faces from my years in the
West.
As should be expected, Mass began
with full-throated hymn-singing (Patrimony! Catholics can’t sing like that!),
and the music was excellent throughout, including the organ-playing.
Mass was conducted in the
Ordinary Form, with two notable (approved) additions: the Collect for Purity at
the outset (between the salutation and the Penitential Act, I understand), and
the Prayer of Humble Access at Communion (just before “Behold the Lamb of God”,
at the place when the priest says a private prayer for worthy reception).
[From what I am given to understand, this use of these two prayers is a preparation for using the Anglican Use Mass as given in the Book of Divine Worship, and is thus wholly appropriate and right.]
For the benefit of readers unfamiliar with these prayers, here are their texts, as given in the Catholic Book of Divine Worship for the Anglican Use:
[From what I am given to understand, this use of these two prayers is a preparation for using the Anglican Use Mass as given in the Book of Divine Worship, and is thus wholly appropriate and right.]
For the benefit of readers unfamiliar with these prayers, here are their texts, as given in the Catholic Book of Divine Worship for the Anglican Use:
Almighty God, unto whom all hearts are open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid: Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love thee, and worthily magnify thy holy Name; through Christ our Lord. Amen.
We do not presume to come to this thy Table, O merciful Lord, trusting in our own righteousness, but in thy manifold and great mercies. We are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs under thy Table. But thou art the same Lord whose property is always to have mercy. Grant us therefore, gracious Lord, so to eat the flesh of thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and to drink his blood, that we may evermore dwell in him, and he in us. Amen.Mgr Entwistle remarked at the very good bunfight afterward (Patrimony!) that to Anglican laity, the use of those two prayers are the sine qua non of Anglican liturgy, and I think I may as an interested observer agree: the first is of course Sarum, and the second is Cranmerian but certainly orthodox.
One tiny variant was also quietly
pleasing: whether “official” or not, the congregation very devoutly said “And
with thy spirit” throughout, and who can
but applaud this?
The readings were taken from the
Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (the so-called Ignatius Press
Lectionary); apparently the ACCA has been using the RSV for some years prior to
the establishment of the Ordinariate in any case. The sermon was good, solid, and of fair length – more
Patrimony! (If Catholics can’t
sing, neither in the main can the average Catholic priest preach, after all – this is my own wry observation – so
may these good people diffuse their gifts widely and quickly…)
The prayers of intercession were
not, as I had surmised, recited using the Anglican Prayer for the Church. As I have said, only two prayers from
the Anglican tradition supplemented the liturgy. The celebrant said the Roman Canon on this Sunday, but I am
informed that he has used other Eucharistic Prayers from the Roman Missal on
other days.
There were two servers, and
incense was used – this being the first time in my friend’s experience of
attending Ordinariate Masses there.
Why so? SS Ninian and Chad
being a very small church in truth, the sanctuary is not suited to large
services, and this accounts for the restrained but reverent liturgical style
there – in such a small church one cannot expect the sort of liturgical
pageantry that larger churches can put on. In other words, SS Ninian and Chad is not the Brompton
Oratory!
Mass was, of course, said ad
orientem, and everyone knelt for Communion
at the rail. My friend was careful
to remind me that Communion was given in Both Kinds, and that the chalice was
administered by being held to each communicant’s lips, in the usual Anglican
fashion, so that the communicants did not themselves handle the chalice. This would be entirely new to average
Catholics!
(Since at present the Monsignor
is the only priest of the Ordinariate – though I hear that ordinations in
Melbourne, Queensland, Adelaide, and so forth will occur fairly soon, as least
as regards the first city named – it has seemed prudent to use the Ordinary
Form, just slightly supplemented, rather than the Book of Divine Worship’s
Eucharistic liturgy, the only other approved Anglican Use Mass at present,
since if a local diocesan priest has to say Mass while Entwistle is off on
Ordinariate business around Australia, it would be difficult for such a supply
priest to celebrate a liturgy to him unknown.)
The Ordinariate is still but
newly-born; the Ordinary has very slender resources, and so matters will
progress slowly at first. One
might say that Our Lady of the Southern Cross indeed holds a precious infant in
her arms – one of Our Lord’s youngest brethren, still literally infans, unable to speak (having no website for the
moment)! We know that she will
dearly care for this her latest adopted child.
Given this, it is unsurprising
that these recently-arrived Ordinariate members have been happily received by
the wider Archdiocese of Perth, and feel very much welcomed. Holy Mother Church rejoices in these
members now fully united to her!
Our Lady of the Southern Cross,
pray for them, pray for more to join them, and pray for us.
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