A parishioner was quite shocked to find that "Call to Action" - the dissident group calling for change in all sorts of areas of Church life - held a meeting in the neighbouring parish (run by the Benedictines of Ampleforth). Apparently members from the two dioceses of Liverpool and Lancaster were present. The minutes below are freely available on their web-site, so I will leave you to ponder them for yourselves.
The only comment I make, apart from noting that there are two regular Sunday Extraordinary Form Masses in the same Deanery, is that I find myself in complete agreement with the reasons they give for holding the meeting. I suspect I am in agreement with them only in letter and not in the spirit of the aims!
"To speak freely" - often within the Church today many who continue to hold the same views of the Faith of their fathers and mothers have not felt at liberty to speak freely.
"To engage in dialogue" - often those who question heterodox practices or liturgical abuses receive absolutely no answer from the powers that be or are stonewalled and sidelined.
"To revisit Vatican II" - Along with Pope Emeritus Benedict, the present Holy Father and many others, I too am all in favour of revisiting Vatican II and interpreting it in the same way as all other Church Councils and teaching - in continuity with our Tradition.
"Be consulted about the future of our Church" - I can't ever recall being consulted about any of the willy nilly changes to liturgy and practice that seem to have become usual in many parts of the Church - not things that are publicly announced by the Holy See but all those little add-ons that accrue to the Mass with no official sanction and the deliberate mis-application of norms (such as the abuse in the number of extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion).
The real call to action is the one Pope Francis is giving us - to be faithful to Jesus and His Church.
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1. The meeting started with Sr Mary Feane in the Chair
and Fr Paul Browne taking the minutes. Later Ray McGarry was elected as acting
Chairman and Angela Bolton as acting Secretary.
2. We then spent a few minutes introducing ourselves
to our neighbour, in couples, and sharing our reasons for attending .We each
then shared what we had just learnt with the whole group.
3. Reasons given for attending the meeting included:
to be able to
speak freely
to engage in
dialogue
to revisit
Vatican II
to be consulted
about the future of our church.
Some thought that more consultation should be our
number one priority – building up a relationship with the bishops: we want
dialogue instead of dictatorship.
We have a strong tradition of teaching on social
justice – we need to build on this. We need to have an equal say, a sense of
ownership (it’s our church!), the lack of which leads to injustice and
powerlessness.
Others lamented the loss of ecumenical trust, the lack
of ecumenical dialogue and discussion, for example in the way the new Mass
translation was imposed and designed (in part) to move us away from agreed
versions of common Christian prayers, such as the Creed and the Gloria. Another
example was the introduction of the Anglican ‘Ordinariate’ for members of the
Church of England wishing to join the Catholic Church as a body, without
consultation with the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Archbishop of Westminster
– or any of our bishops.
4. The meeting agreed that the Lancaster and Liverpool
groups would continue to meet as one group for the foreseeable future. But it
was suggested that, because we were such a large group (c 20), in future meetings we might discuss a topic in our two diocesan
groups before reporting back to the whole group.
5. Someone else suggested that we invite a bishop next
time, just to listen. He could give
us his considered feedback at a later date.
6. The next
meeting will be on Tuesday, 29
January, 7.30 - 9pm, at the
Parish Centre of the Anglican Church of St John the Divine, Hewlett Street,
Coppull, Lancashire, PR7 5AH. Hope you can make it – and maybe bring a friend.
Angela Bolton,
Acting Secretary.
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ACTA: Third
Meeting of the Lancaster & Liverpool Group
Coppull, Tuesday 26
February 2013
1. After refreshments (and moving rooms)
the meeting began with prayer at 7.55pm. Ray McGarry was in the chair and Angie
Bolton took the minutes.
2. Apologies for absence were
received from: Agnes Dobson, Anton Fernandopuille, Bernard Hayes, Clare Cobb,
Ewa Bem, Gavin Young, Gerry Proctor, Maureen Connell, Nick Young, Pauline
Volks, Richard Sloan, Stephen Hoyland, Tony Slingo and Val Farrell (14).
3. Present were: Alex Walker,
Angie Bolton, Ann Marie Cullen, Ann Miller, Anne Foley, Bernard Traynor, Chris
Cullen, Claire Ball, Denis Cullen, Dympna Magee, Elizabeth Kelly, John
Sullivan, Julie Dale, Kathy Bamber, Maryrose Fitzsimmons, Moya Duffy, Paul
Browne, Ray McGarry, Simon Dale, Susan Bamber, Theresa Swan and Terry Duffy
(22).
4. The minutes of our second meeting
were accepted without amendment.
5. Under matters
arising, John Sullivan
reported on the three tasks he’d undertaken at
the last meeting:
a. to seek a 30-minute meeting with Bishop Tom Williams (acting Bishop of Liverpool) simply to
inform him that this group exists and to explain our raison d’être,
expanding on our national mission statement. Not asking him to do anything, nor
to agree or commit to anything. The bishop flatly turned down his request, thus
‘highlighting why ACTA
exists in the first place’, as John commented. In a second message, Bishop Tom
said that as he was very busy (Archbishop Patrick was convalescing and then
retiring) a meeting would be impossible till after the summer. Concern was
expressed by several members of the group at the way in which John’s very
courteous request had been handled so ungraciously.
b. John sent his (amended) document concerning the Selection of Bishops to ACTA’s core team,
as this is a matter of potential concern to all dioceses in the future, as well
as of current concern to the several dioceses awaiting bishops at the moment.
The document duly appeared on our website. He had also emailed a copy to each
member of our group.
c. John also contacted The Tablet to see if they would be interested in
publicising his proposals. But, he told us, after an initially positive
response, there had been no follow-up.
Paul Browne made available hard-copies of our letter
to the Papal Nuncio asking simply what
were the criteria and what was the process for appointing a new Archbishop of Liverpool. Paul
composed the letter, as agreed, but in the end it was thought more prudent for
Angie Bolton to sign it and send it from her address. Several members of this group affirmed the letter by email and
their names were added. No response had yet been received.
Terry Duffy made available hard-copies of the
A5 pamphlet he’d agreed to
produce, based on our mission statement, explaining who we are and what we are
about, and advertising the date, time and location of our next meeting. There
is now a potential template that could be further customised, and used to
advertise an ACTA meeting in one of our parishes, for example. He had already
emailed a copy to all members of the group.
6a. We are invited to send two
members to the ACTA Leaders’ Conference at Hinsley Hall, Leeds, 6 - 7 May 2013. John Sullivan agreed to be our second representative, joining Ray
McGarry who had
already booked.
6b. We are also invited to submit two suggested
topics for discussion at that
meeting. The first, we agreed, should be the criteria and the process employed in the appointment
of new bishops and the need for genuine
consultation with the laity and priests of the local church concerned. This is
a matter of current importance to those of us living in the diocese of
Liverpool – but it’s a matter of national concern as well. Several English
dioceses are waiting for new bishops, East Anglia for two years now,
apparently. One of us declared this topic to be a ‘game-changer’. That it would have a ripple
effect: if we could get the method of selecting new bishops changed it could be
the start of a new and healthier culture in our church.
We decided that our second discussion
topic for the
Leaders’ Meeting should be the New Mass Translation (imposed in Advent 2011). In
particular we proposed that, just as, by decree of Pope Benedict XVI, the
Tridentine Mass is now legally available always and everywhere a priest and a
‘group’ of laity want it (regardless of the wishes of the local bishop in whose
name all sacraments are celebrated), so we who welcomed the Mass as reformed by
Pope Paul VI in obedience to the decree of the Second Vatican Council, and want
to carry on celebrating it, should be allowed to use the translation we have
been using for the past forty years. Much discussion ensued: and it became
clear that we objected not only to the new text itself but also to the way in
which it had been steam-rollered through and imposed on us, with merely token
consultation with the bishops and no consultation at all with priests and
people.
One of us considered that this topic ‘matters even more than the selection of
bishops’. It was claimed that there was ‘profound unhappiness about
the new translation’ in our church.
This certainly was true of our meeting. Strong exception was taken to the whole
business: both the product and the process by which it was produced and
imposed on us. Imposed first by Rome on our bishops, thus seriously
disempowering them in the area of liturgy and usurping their right,
specifically recognised in the Council’s Liturgy decree, to commission and
approve the official vernacular translation of the new Latin text of the Mass,
renewed and reformed according to the principles laid down by the Pope and the
rest of the world’s bishops at Vatican II. In defiance of which, this new
‘translation’, first imposed on our bishops, was then (in 2011) imposed by our
bishops on us, priests and people;
the priests expected to promote the product even if they were privately
appalled by it. As one of us pointed out, both the method by which bishops are
still being secretly selected and imposed on us, and the way in which this new
translation was secretly created and imposed on us, are two blatant examples of
the ongoing abuse of power. (As was the scandal of clerical sexual abuse of
children and the subsequent cover-up, and indeed effective collusion in it, by
so many bishops and religious superiors.)
As time was running out, we left it to John Sullivan
to exactly formulate our proposal, which he subsequently did like this:
The New
Translation of the Missal
We’re asking for
(i) an opportunity to discuss the
deep unhappiness caused both by the lamentable and unhelpful quality of the
language it uses and also by the way it was imposed without any serious
consultation with the People of God; followed by (ii) an exploration of ways to change this situation so that the
language of the Mass – so central to the framing, nurture and expression of our
faith – can more effectively communicate God’s invitation to receive, respond
to and share His love.
6 c. We also made a third suggestion to the Leaders’ Conference: that as
a matter of urgency they appoint a professional ACTA National Press Officer. Chris Cullen suggested Paul
Vallely (leading
British writer on Africa and development issues, active in Traidcraft, the
CIIR, Christian Aid and CAFOD, now associate editor of The
Independent, correspondent
of The Church Times and a director
of The Tablet) and it seemed
that those of us who know of him agreed that he would be eminently suitable.
7a. We did not discuss married priests (or the imminent ‘Eucharistic famine’) at all.
7b. But we did discuss the New Mass Translation (see 6b above). It was agreed that Paul
Browne should write a letter to the Archbishop of Liverpool (when we have one)
and to Bishop Michael Campbell of Lancaster, asking for permission to use the
‘old’ (Vatican II) translation, in which he would refer to the canon law that
recognises the right, and sometimes even the duty, of the laity to raise
matters of concern with their bishops.
8. We agreed that our next meeting
would be on Tuesday 16 April, 7.30-9pm,
at the same place: the Parish Centre of St John the Divine, Hewlett Street,
Coppull, Lancashire, PR7 5AH. As the room is not available until
7.30pm, could I ask that people aim to arrive promptly at this time and no
earlier? Many thanks.
Angie Bolton
Acting
Secretary