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Farewell to the Anglican Church

Advent Sunday was the day on which I took my leave as a member of the Anglican Church and officially joined the Catholic Church as a Candidate.

1211152-1208760-thumbnail.jpgPerhaps it was appropriate for the last time that I took communion as an Anglican that I did so in one of the finest Anglican settings. As we were visiting relations in the neighbourhood of Winchester that weekend, we went to Winchester Cathedral for the morning service on Sunday. It was a fine, dignified service of Holy Communion with beautiful singing from the Cathedral choir.

In the evening we were back home and I went to the Evening Mass at my church for the Rite of Welcome for me and one other member of my RCIA group. It was chaotic in the way that all Catholic services seem to be these days, yet it was done. Although the Rite of Welcome is not a sacrament, the fact is that I have felt different ever since. I can’t wait until Easter when I will be able to experience the full grace of the sacraments.

I think I’ve mentioned before that entering on the path of being a Catholic has paradoxically resulted in my appreciating the Church of England more. Nowhere is that more true than in the public worship of the two churches. Every Anglican church seems to have a natural dignity about its worship that quite escapes modern-day Catholicism (at least as I’ve experienced it). Even the smallest Anglican congregation seems to be able to make a good fist at singing the hymns. “Catholics can’t sing” is not a stereotype - it’s true - mind you they we would be helped if they we had some decent hymns to sing in the first place. To me, moving from an Anglican church into a Catholic church in the same town with approximately the same size of congregation, the Catholic Masses by comparison seem sloppy, badly prepared, poorly presented, with dreadful music, banal liturgy, and poor preaching. It’s not peculiar to this one church - it seems to be the same wherever I go.

Of course the positives outweigh the negatives. But it could so easily be different!

Posted on Wednesday, December 12, 2007 at 10:00AM by Registered CommenterSi Fractus Fortis in , , | Comments4 Comments

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Reader Comments (4)

Welcome indeed! Your experience reminds me of when I was converting to Catholicism at college about 15 years ago. The Anglican chaplain at the time vaguely tried to talk me out of it by appealing purely to my aesthetic sensibilities. There is of course no doubt that choral Evensong is a glorious thing which I still love; the concrete hangar of the Catholic chaplaincy with its guitar group was a sorry contrast. But do bear with it - the profound mystery of the Eucharist always manages to come through, and as you know our beloved Pope Benedict is slowly but surely bringing the dignity back to our liturgy. Deo Gratias!

December 14, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJames A

Dear James

Thanks very much for your encouragement. At one stage of my life I was quite into guitar groups and indeed when they are well done it can be a very positive experience. The problem with the Catholic guitar groups I have come across is that they don't know how to lead the worship properly and no one in the congregation can sing the songs well!

December 14, 2007 | Registered CommenterSi Fractus Fortis

The above resonates truthfully with me- especially as it relates to that particular Mass, which was indeed chaotic.

March 26, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMelissa

Dear Melissa,

What I've discovering in the year (plus) since I wrote this posting is that I prefer the Catholic Mass to the Anglican equivalent even though the Catholic Mass is almost always more poorly presented. As James said above "the profound mystery of the Eucharist always manages to come through".

Still, if we had the truth of the Catholic Mass presented with the Anglican standard of care and dignity we really would have something!

March 26, 2009 | Registered CommenterSi Fractus Fortis

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