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Ordinariate for former Anglicans grows in US

Less than a year after it was established, the ordinariate for former Anglicans seeking to join the Catholic Church in the United States has grown to include 1500 individuals, 35 communities and 24 priests.

The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter has also had a five-acre property, worth $NZ6 million, donated to it next to its principal church in Houston, Texas, on which to build its first chancery.

Pope Benedict XVI established the ordinariate — which is equivalent to a diocese — on January 1, 2012, for former Anglican groups and clergy seeking to become Catholic while retaining aspects of their Anglican heritage and liturgy.

Its ordinary, Monsignor Jeffrey Steenson is a former Episcopal bishop who became a Catholic in 2007 and a Catholic priest in 2009.

Among those who have joined the ordinariate recently is Laurence Gipson, 70, a former Episcopal priest who before he retired was rector of St Martin’s Episcopal Church in Houston. His parishioners included former President George W. Bush and his wife Laura Bush.

Gipson sees the ordinariate as “advancing the cause of unity in the Church”.

“It offers Anglicans a way to affirm the Catholic faith, that is, a way to affirm orthodox or right belief, while at the same time being able to worship God and practise the Christian life according to the Anglican tradition and patrimony,” he said.

Gipson said he was drawn to the Catholic faith in part because of the Church’s “clarity” in teachings and the “unity of faith amongst the faithful”.

“What I yearned for and sought was a more centralised understanding of authority, the magisterium, the teaching authority, which could much more quickly and much more definitely interpret Scripture and decide on the faith when it was in dispute and settle those issues,” he said.

Sources:

Catholic News Agency

The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter

Image: Seward’s Folly

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