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On October 20, Pope Benedict XVI approved a plan wherein the Pope will issue an apostolic
constitution, a form of papal decree, that will lead to the creation of "personal ordinariates" for
Anglicans who convert to Rome.
Gledhill and Owen in the Australian note the obvious in mentioning the simmering accusation against
Rome for "poaching":
Anglicans privately accused Rome of poaching and attacked Dr Williams for capitulating
to the Vatican. Some called for his resignation. Although there was little he could have
done to forestall the move, many were dismayed at his joint statement with the Archbishop
of Westminster.
A fine and necessary read on the matter comes from Oliver Lough deriving his analysis and
commentary from a gaze at history's best known Anglican to Catholic convert, the great churchman and
theologian Cardinal John Henry Newman.
And goes on to bring back before the modern reader many of the qualities that make Newman an
exciting and enduring figure in Western history:
It would be easy enough to assume that the smells, bells, and reassuringly rigid doctrine of
the Catholic Church eventually provided too much of a temptation for the intellectually
fraught Newman to resist.
As it happened, the spark of his conversion came from a quite different direction. Poring
over an obscure 5th century religious text in 1839, he came to the conclusion, despite
himself, that the Episcopalian faith was founded on a series of misconceptions that
precluded its ever being a "true" church.
What followed was described by Newman as a "great revolution of mind, which led me to
leave my own home, to which I was bound by so many strong and tender ties."
His final conversion was some six years in the making, and came at a time when even the
merest hint of "popishness" was still anathema in Britain. As one historian puts it, "to enter
the Roman Church was literally to exile oneself from English life."
Newman's slow and painful transformation was an act of spiritual and intellectual bravery
so profound that it eventually helped kick-start the gradual rehabilitation of Catholicism
into conventional society. It involved not just abandoning much of what he had stood for,
but immersing himself in a new and alien creed.
It may well be that such matters arouse in most the feeling of a dusty and complicated past. I
recommend though that no social evolution should bring us to the point when major world
leaders should be allowed to act without account, and when courage, integrity, and rigorous
devotion of mind become a matter of disinterest.