At the first Mass of Fr Andrew Burnham at the Oxford Oratory on Sunday, the great Dominican theologian Fr Aidan Nichols described the Ordinariate as “nothing less than the reconfiguring of Anglicanism by union with the Petrine centre and its criteria of orthodoxy”.
That is a sweepingly ambitious statement of the Ordinariate’s purpose – and it might have seemed over the top had it not been for the extraordinary scenes at Westminster Cathedral the day before, when Archbishop Vincent Nichols ordained the former Anglican bishops of Fulham, Ebbsfleet and Richborough. Rather to the surprise of some commentators, the Bishops of England and Wales really seem to have lined up behind the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. Has there been some arm-twisting by the CDF?
But in one respect we’re still in no-man’s-land. The new Ordinary, Fr Keith Newton, has not yet been given a London church to serve as his headquarters. (We can’t use the word “cathedral”, but it wouldn’t be that wide of the mark.) Perhaps the delay reflects the great importance of getting this decision right. Is there a central London Catholic church that can be appropriated without too much fuss? Corpus Christi, Maiden Lane, comes to mind, but it’s too small. St James’s, Spanish Place, would be ideal in some respects – but I can’t see its devoted congregation agreeing to vacate such a masterpiece of the Victorian Gothic revival.
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