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The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter Keeps Busy During Holy Week and Easter

Receptions and an Announcement of the First Ordination HIghlight the week

"The journey to full communion, for both individuals and groups of the Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, seems not to be unlike [the journey of Moses and the Chosen People in their journey from captivity to the Promised Land].  In these first three months, I have heard stories of faith and courage that humble and inspire...\" Msgr. Jeffrey Steenson


WASHINGTON, DC (Catholic Online) - Msgr. Jeffrey Steenson, Ordinary for the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter has been busy with visits to new and emerging communities for the new jurisdiction established by Pope Benedict in January 2012.

In his Holy Week message, Msgr. Steenson reflected on the choices being made by those who are coming into the Church.

"The journey to full communion, for both individuals and groups of the Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, seems not to be unlike [the journey of Moses and the Chosen People in their journey from captivity to the Promised Land].  In these first three months, I have heard stories of faith and courage that humble and inspire; but there have also been disappointing stories of those who have come to the doorstep but then for one reason or another do not step through the portal.  These stories always bring sadness and sometimes scandal, when they involve an unwillingness to embrace wholeheartedly Catholic teaching and discipline.  This is, according to Lumen Gentium 14, to those who know 'that the Catholic Church was made necessary by Christ,' a matter of salvation.

"On Palm Sunday I had the great privilege of visiting one of the happy stories of the Ordinariate, the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Orlando, which has been superbly shepherded over the years by Bishop Louis Campese.  Here are people who have been well catechized, with the right disposition, who have already built good relationships with the local Catholic Church, well poised to grow, and they are an excellent model for what an Ordinariate congregation can be."

"In this infinite mercy, God watched over the reluctant pilgrims as they wandered through the wilderness for the next forty years.  But it was a severe mercy, a difficult penance, and many were not ultimately able to see the Promised Land before they died.  I pray that if you are on this journey, if you are persuaded that the Catholic Church is the will of Christ and the keys have been given to St. Peter and his successors, nothing will deter you from this holy goal, which is the principal mission of the Ordinariate."


An Anglican priest and members of his parish from a suburb of Philadelphia were received into the Catholic Church during Holy Week

The rector and 25 members of St. Michael the Archangel Anglican parish in Philadelphia were received into full communion with the Catholic Church on April 2. This is the first Anglican community in Pennsylvania to join a new national structure created by Pope Benedict XVI for Anglican groups and clergy who are becoming Catholic. The rector, Fr. David Ousley, is preparing to be ordained a Catholic priest later this year.

Monsignor Steenson will celebrate Mass and preach for the new Catholic community on Holy Thursday, April 5, 6 p.m. at Holy Cross Church, 140 E. Mount Airy Avenue in the Mount Airy section of Philadelphia.

"We are very grateful to Pope Benedict for giving us this opportunity to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church while retaining our identity as Anglicans," said Ousley.

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia said, "It's my pleasure to prayerfully welcome David Ousley and the faithful of Saint Michael the Archangel Anglican Parish as they enter into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church. We will support our brothers and sisters in Christ on their spiritual journey. May the Lord grant them peace and every blessing."

St. Michael's traces its roots to the Episcopal Church of St. James the Less, founded in East Falls in 1846. For the past five years, the parish has been part of the Anglican Church of America. The community will be moving its Sunday services to Holy Cross Parish at 9 a.m. after Easter. Weekday services are at the St. Michael\'s Rectory in Mount Airy.


An Indianapolis Anglican Community will join the Church at the Easter Vigil

Eighteen members of the St. Joseph of Arimathea Anglican community in Indianapolis will be received into full communion with the Catholic Church during the Easter Vigil on Saturday, April 7, 9 p.m., at Ss. Peter and Paul Cathedral, 1347 N. Meridian Street. Bishop Christopher Coyne, Apostolic Administrator for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, will be principal celebrant.

The St. Joseph of Arimathea Anglican Use Society is the first community in Indiana to join a new Ordinariate. Luke Reese, an Anglican priest who leads the group, is studying for ordination as a Catholic priest.

"We are very grateful to Pope Benedict for giving us this opportunity to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church while retaining our Anglican heritage, and to the Archdiocese of Indianapolis which has been very welcoming and kind to our group during this journey," said Reese.

Msgr. Steenson noted, "I deeply appreciate ...

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1 - 6 of 6 Comments

  1. Richard
    1 year ago

    @Michael:    28 “The older brother became angry and refused to go in. So his father went out and pleaded with him. 29 But he answered his father, ‘Look! All these years I’ve been slaving for you and never disobeyed your orders. Yet you never gave me even a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends. 30 But when this son of yours who has squandered your property with prostitutes comes home, you kill the fattened calf for him!’

       31 “‘My son,’ the father said, ‘you are always with me, and everything I have is yours. 32 But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.’”

  2. Diane
    1 year ago

    I just love these new Anglican Catholics and any stories about this new Ordinariate. Such courage these people possess who have come over to full union with the Church. I welcome them and continue to pray for them. God bless them and Pope Benedict too.

  3. michael
    1 year ago

    If possible, I would love to see an article on the process involved with these groups and their "ministers" coming into the Church. Has there been, for example, serious catechesis over a lengthy period? Are those "hot button" issues dealt with, for example, contraception and extra ecclesiam nulla salus? As a final comment, it is wonderful to see people leaving the horrors of revolutionary Protestantism and entering the true Church. I am glad that Catholic.org has covered this so extensively and with much joy. At the same time, however, I have not seen such excitement shown in regards to the SSPX and the attempts made to regularize their situation. SSPX bishops, priests, religious, and lay folk are full members of the true Church, albeit in an estranged relationship, but they are being forced to accept the full message of Vatican II, though most people still struggle to understand its new orientations and to embrace some of its more ambiguous statements. The SSPX is told that it must accept ecumenism as a reality...since when did ecumenism become a dogma? Have these Anglicans been given such hurdles to climb? Why is it that Catholics, in this case the SSPX, must climb higher hurdles to remain in Holy Church than those coming in? And are those coming in told they must accept all the teachings of the Church not just those at Vatican II?

  4. abey
    1 year ago

    Just as the west from the time of Constantine & beyond turned whole heartedly from their Paganism to the Christian faith & have risen ever since, is proof of the Christian Faith & as Faith does not change it would be wise of them Anglicans who have fallen away from the beliefs, which is nothing but leading to their Pre Christian Pagan ways is for a sure to the fall, for the faithful to roll back to the very same faith lost to them but found in the Catholic fold, in the same Unchanged Apostolic Faith, irrespective what the Queen of England has to say, where matters of faith are to The Church & matters of Politics are to the crown & in this case it is a matter of Faith. Remembering that it is faith to Christ that leads, the leader & the binder, learned through History, be the guide through the Holy Week.

  5. Wade Marsh
    1 year ago

    This is beautiful to see God building up His Church as One united in Love by His Holy Spirit in
    the Holy Mass celebrated around the world in His humble Shepard on earth Pope Benedict XVI.

  6. Martins
    1 year ago

    Great

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