In Canada, this Divine Mercy Sunday sees two former Anglican bishops, Peter Wilkinson
and Carl Reid received, with members of their congregations, into full communion with
the Catholic Church, in accordance with Pope Benedict XVI’s 2009 Apostolic Constitution
Anglicanorumcoetibus, which provides a structure for welcoming Anglicans
into the Catholic Church. The ceremonies of reception will be held at special Masses,
one in Ottawa, the nation’s capital; the other in Victoria on Canada’s west coast.
“We’ve tried to respond to a request from a certain group of Anglicans, who
wish for full communion now,” said Catholic Archbishop Terrence Prendergast of Ottawa.
“And we also realize that we have to continue to work for the full unity of the Church
in whatever way Christ would like that to be, however He wants to bring it about with
the remaining Anglicans.”
Archbishop Prendergast spoke about Sunday’s liturgy:
“I’ve learned how to celebrate Mass in the Anglican tradition that’s been approved
for this group of Anglicans to come over, and I’ll be celebrating their liturgy on
Sunday afternoon. And the priest who’s has been working with them has also learned
their liturgy as well, so I think that will encourage them and comfort them.”
He
also put the event into a larger, ecumenical context: “I think anything that will
strengthen unity among Christians is going to be a positive sign for others. One of
the great scandals, of course, in our world is that there are so many Christians who
believe in Jesus Christ and all that He has brought to us and yet that we go about
it in such different ways. Our disunity is a countersign to the evangelisation of
our world, and I think anything that will bring us closer together that recognises
unity in diversity is going to be rich blessing for us and a help to evangelisation.”
Listen
to the full interview of Archbishop Terrence Prendergast with Christopher Wells: