31 October 2024

An Hour a Day Keeps the Anxiety Away

I wish I could still walk to Church and make my Holy Hour before the Blessed Sacrament, but I can't, so prayer at home must suffice.

From Crisis

By Ryan Patrick Budd

Catholic tradition has a solution to the anxiety we face in our stressful lives: the Holy Hour.

Perhaps, as the election approaches and the news becomes saturated with grim predictions and shrill voices, we’re beginning to feel that our nation’s destiny is sliding more and more out of control, giving way to feelings of anxiety and tension, or even terror.

From a biblical perspective, this state of affairs—our being helpless before the material forces surrounding us—is actually normal. We always have more or less the same amount of influence in the world we live in. Sometimes, we feel our lack of influence more than other times, but it rarely changes.

If this is so, we must interrogate the anxiety and tension we’re feeling. Where is it coming from? 

St. John Cassian, perhaps the most important spiritual writer you’ve probably never heard of, wrote the first of his famous ten Conferences on the discernment of thoughts. By doing this, he indicated how important this topic is—it is foundational, a sine qua non of a successful Christian life. 

Cassian taught his monks to interrogate their thoughts: Where did they come from? Whose thoughts were they really? Were they from the world, the flesh, or the devil, or were they from God?

If we’re feeling consistently anxious and tense, then our thoughts are coming from the wrong place. St. Paul commanded the Philippians: 

have no anxiety about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God, and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will keep your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 4:6-7)

This does not, of course, mean we have to suppress our emotions. Jesus Himself shared His emotions with His three closest friends on the eve of His passion: “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death” (Matthew 26:38). Paul shared his anxieties with the various churches in his epistles. 
Rather than suppress these emotions, Paul teaches us acknowledge them but not to be governed by them. Rather, we must “let our requests be made known to God.” Then, the certitude of His almighty power and boundless love will cause His peace to reign in our hearts.

Paul’s answer to helplessness is prayer, prayer with real faith that proceeds from real knowledge. The peace he promises us in return is more than an emotion. It is a conviction, founded in certain truth more than in passing fancy or flights of feeling.

If they’re not from God, where are these thoughts causing our anxiety coming from? If we’re inclined to blame the devil, I think that’s often too simplistic an answer. 

Cassian makes clear that our own mental habits make it easier or harder for the devil to oppress us with anxiety. We must, accordingly, also interrogate our habits to find the source of the bad thoughts that plague us.

We might well consider the story of Liel Eden, a Jewish woman who compellingly shared her journey from secular to observant Judaism and how she came to observe Shabat—the day-long period of silence, rest, and recollection that is the heart of Jewish life. 

Ms. Eden shared how, as a teenaged girl, she chose to stay home on Saturdays in order to observe Shabat, while her family went on exciting trips and ate at great restaurants.

This decision at first made her sad. She was lonely and bored, home alone all day. 

But then she began “making her requests known to God,” and she began to cherish the time of study and prayer where she could not only speak to God but hear Him speaking to her. Eventually, her whole family became Shabat observant, and a newfound peace reigned in their home.

Contemporary Christian tradition has inherited a practice we might call the “daily Shabat.” That practice is the holy hour.

In his classic work Introduction to the Devout Life, St. Francis de Sales considers a daily time of prayer—ideally an hour long, and early in the morning—necessary to maintaining “the peace of God” in an increasingly busy and bustling world. His advice has become all the more prescient as we have all become beholden to what Cardinal Robert Sarah calls “the dictatorship of noise.”
There are many ways to make a holy hour—from kneeling before the exposed Blessed Sacrament to sitting at home with one’s Bible or rosary or a spiritual book. But it increasingly seems that we all must strive to make one each day in order to “keep our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.” 

By dedicating time—serious time—each day, we establish a firm habit of “making our requests known to God” and listening to His voice, so that we might know the peace that surpasses understanding. The narrative of Heaven will displace the narrative of the world, and it will put the narrative of the world in context.

I know the many objections this will suggest. How are married people with children to do this? How are busy cogs in the “workforce” to make the time? What if I’m always tired? What if I don’t know what to do or what to say?

My simple answer is to answer with a question: How is the way we’re currently doing things working out for us? What kind of Christian witness are we bearing, living as we are? How ready are we to practice the Christian virtues when our minds are absorbed in the narrative of the world?

Perhaps we don’t think we can take a whole hour. Then we should start with what we think we can do. Thirty-one minutes (letting us round up and call it a holy “hour”) would be a great start. 

But we ought to each ask ourselves: If I had one of those apps that monitored our screen time, could we still justify my excuse that I don’t have time for prayer? What if I replaced that screen time with Face time—face-to-face with God (cf. Psalm 27:8)?

We will have to wrestle like Jacob to keep true to this commitment, especially when we will inevitably fail to get up on time, fall asleep during our prayer, and sit there with nothing on our minds except everything we could be doing (including sleeping) instead of giving our time to God. This wrestling may leave us with a limp, but it will also lead to God’s blessing (cf. Genesis 32:22-32). 

As G.K. Chesterton once said, everything worth doing is—at first—worth doing poorly. If we struggle half as hard as the teenaged Liel Eden, who stayed at home alone while her family was out having a good time, I expect we’ll do just fine.

If we must keep tabs on the narrative of the world, because it affects us and our families, we must be even more committed to the narrative of Heaven. That narrative is within our reach. “The word is near you, on your lips and in your heart” (Romans 10:8). We have only to incline our ear, that we may hear.

Rebuilding R’lyeh: Houellebecq, Lovecraft, and the Meaning of Architecture

"If you consider only utility, the things you build will soon be useless... nobody wants to be in it." ~ Sir Roger Scruton, PhD(Cantab)

From The European Conservative

By Steven Tucker

Modern architecture is meant to transform human beings into alien beings upon their own former home-world.

In his 1963 essay “Reflections of a Gothic Mind,” the great American conservative thinker Russell Kirk wrote of how, when it came not only to architecture, but to his outlook upon the world in general, “I did not love cold harmony and perfect regularity of organisation; what I sought was variety, mystery, tradition, the venerable, the awful … I would have given any number of neo-classical pediments for one poor battered gargoyle.”

I was reminded of these sentiments recently when reading a description of a noticeably gargoyle-less modern-day building in Paris. It appeared in Michel Houellebecq’s newly-translated novel, Annihilation

A blinding light shimmered on the walls of the High Court. He had never found any particular aesthetic merit in that unstructured juxtaposition of gigantic glass-and-steel polyhedrons dominating a bleak and muddy landscape. In any case, the goal pursued by its designers was not beauty, or even harmony, but rather the display of a certain technical skill—as if the most important thing in the end was that it was visible to any notional extraterrestrials.

How seriously should we take this final quip about what might be termed “alien architecture” here? Before he became a novelist in his own right, Houellebecq produced a book-length literary study in 1991 focusing upon the American master of Weird Fiction H.P. Lovecraft, whose stories tell of demonic extraterrestrial beings from beyond the stars, the most famous and fearsome of whom is Cthulhu, a gigantic, squid-headed entity who currently sleeps beneath the Pacific Ocean in a sunken city named R’lyeh. R’lyeh has a very strange and anti-humanistic architectural quality, just like the Paris High Court in Annihilation.  

In his 1928 short story The Call of Cthulhu, Lovecraft has a sailor stumble across this alien Atlantis. The sailor’s name is Johansen, and he describes the place in terms that explicitly recall Modernist or Futurist architecture: 

Without knowing what Futurism is like, Johansen achieved something very close to it when he spoke of the city; for instead of describing any definite structure or building, he dwells only on broad impressions of vast angles and stone surfaces—surfaces too great to belong to anything right or proper for this earth, and impious with horrible images and hieroglyphs … [The place] was abnormal, non-Euclidean, and loathsomely redolent of spheres and dimensions apart from ours … the geometry of the place was all wrong. One could not be sure that the sea and the ground were horizontal, hence the relative position of everything else seemed phantasmally variable.

Some critics have suggested that Michel Houellebecq’s novels are in many ways disguised adaptations of Lovecraft’s own oeuvre. According to this interpretation, the true alien beings destroying us are not gigantic tentacular-visaged space-demons, but post-human, distinctly abnormal, globalist politicians of the Keir Starmer/Emmanuel Macron-type. These figures possess value-systems every bit as alien to those of the ordinary, ‘primitive’ humans over whom they rule as those of Lovecraft’s ET monsters. 

If this reading is correct, then it is logical that these same humanoid Cthulhus in suits would also need a new R’lyeh. If so, then buildings like the Paris High Court would seem to be physical steel-and-glass outposts of the sunken city itself, and R’lyeh’s chief designer a figure like Le Corbusier, the Swiss Modernist architect (disliked by Houellebecq) who once notoriously desired to flatten much of Paris and rebuild it along more ‘rational’ lines. For Le Corbusier, buildings should not be personalised homes or workplaces, but standardised “machines designed for living in.” But would the true end result of such a post-human programme of architecture actually be to transform men into machines, rather than their buildings?

Tombs designed for living in

In truth, the resemblance between the architecture of Lovecraft’s imaginary alien cities and that of earthly Modernism is actually fairly superficial. Convex and concave surfaces, strange angles and geometries and “vast angles” are all present and correct in R’lyeh, as in so many Modernist structures, but so are innumerable decorative touches that sound every bit as Gothic as the “poor battered gargoyles” perching atop Russell Kirk’s ideal medieval building. 

In Lovecraft’s 1936 story At the Mountains of Madness, the author describes the lost city of another alien race called ‘the Elder Things’ at some length. With its many “monstrous perversions of geometrical laws” and features like “tall cylindrical shafts” and “composite cones and pyramids,” at first blush the city seems to have a Modernist character. Examined more carefully, though, the citadel actually begins to seem scattered throughout with various functionally unnecessary features of a purely decorative nature: “thinnish scalloped disks” and “five-pointed stars,” for example. For all human minds know, the whole place may actually have been one gigantic extraterrestrial cathedral.

In his 1991 study of Lovecraft, Houellebecq imagines the disappointment of an architecturally-adventurous reader of Lovecraft’s fiction heading out into the real human world and trying to rebuild a replica of one of Lovecraft’s fantastical alien cities (here, another rival of R’lyeh called ‘Irem’) for real: 

It would not be rash to imagine a young man emerging enthusiastically from a reading of Lovecraft’s tales and deciding to pursue a study of architecture. Failure and disappointment would lie in wait. The insipid and dull functionality of modern architecture, its zeal to use simple, meagre forms and cold, haphazard materials, are too distinctive to be a product of chance. And no one, at least not for generations to come, will rebuild the faery lace of the palace of Irem.

Someone truly alien like Le Corbusier wouldn’t have approved of any “faery lace,” you see; machines designed for living in had no technical need for such fripperies. Ruthlessly streamlined form and function are, according to the foolishness of the Modernists, beauty personified.

Urban spaceman

In his 1993 essay, “Approaches to Distress,” Houellebecq argues that the successful erasure of anything other than a building’s function in Modernist architecture has essentially transformed the entire urban environment into a gigantic, never-ending conveyor-belt. This conveyor-belt environment is designed to move visitors seamlessly from one sector to another in service of greasing the ever-mobile wheels of international capital. The paving stones beneath your feet may not literally be moving forwards, but they might as well be so. 

Explains Houellebecq: 

This is what happens when a coach full of tourists, thrown off course by the web of exotic traffic signs, drops off its passengers in … the business centre of Barcelona. Immersed in their usual world of steel, glass and signposts, visitors immediately rediscover the rapid stride, the functional and oriented gaze that correspond to the environment offered to them. Progressing between pictograms and written signs, they soon reach the cathedral district, the historic heart of the city. Immediately, their pace slows; the movement of their eyes becomes somewhat random, almost erratic. A certain dazed amazement can be read on their faces (their jaws drop, a phenomenon typical of Americans). Obviously, they feel they are in the presence of unusual, complex objects that are difficult to decipher. Soon, however, messages appear on the walls; thanks to the tourist office, historical and cultural landmarks are set in context; our travellers can take out their camcorders to record the memory of their travels in a guided cultural tour.

Even Lovecraft’s R’lyeh, Irem, and the Lost City of the Elder Ones might have been more immediately comprehensible to confused modern human eyes than much traditional Western architecture, it would appear.

The point of Modernist construction now stands revealed by Houellebecq as being nothing more than to ‘liberate’ [sic] mankind from the binds of time—and thus from his own historic culture. As the tourists enter Barcelona’s identikit business district, which is much the same as their own business districts back in America, they feel perfectly at home. As they enter the locale of Barcelona’s cathedral, however, matters are different. Faced with a genuinely R’lyeh-like piece of architecture such as the Sagrada Família, strewn all over as it is with stone-carved “faery lace,” Gaudí’s strange, organic-looking masterpiece being surely the most authentically Lovecraftian-looking structure on Planet Earth, the confused tourists are confronted with a building that clearly possesses a far deeper structure of meaning, beyond its surface content of mere utilitarian function. 

In general, this is the precise reverse of what the average public building does these days. According to Houellebecq, “Contemporary architecture is a modest architecture; it manifests its autonomous presence, its presence as architecture, solely through discreet winks” such as openly revealing “the techniques behind its own fabrication” in a process known as Bowellism

For a building to openly say “Look at me, I’m a building!” by ostentatiously displaying its lift-shafts on the external façade of the structure, as with the Lloyd’s Building in London, or by flaunting what should by rights be its own deepest pipe-innards on the outside of its walls, as with the Pompidou Centre in Paris, is for such buildings to proudly and publicly deny any higher, sub-surface second-order meaning to their existence. It is the precise reverse of something like a cathedral, littered as they traditionally are with carvings and decorations, such as Russell Kirk’s beloved battered gargoyles. These decorative flourishes (unless their mouths happen to simultaneously act as disguised overflow pipes) are wholly unnecessary from a practical engineering point of view, but they point towards the deeper purpose of a building—and thereby, by implication, towards the deeper purpose of the society that built it.  

Capital cities

The deeper purpose of the civilisation that built the cathedrals was obviously religious in its nature. But what is the deeper purpose of the society that spawned all the above-mentioned baleful, functionalist trends in modern architecture? Nothing less than to transform human beings into alien beings upon their own former home-world in the name of global free-market capitalism. 

In Houellebecq’s view: “Reaching its own optimum by creating places so functional that they become invisible, contemporary architecture is a transparent architecture. Since it has to allow for rapid movement of people and goods, it tends to reduce space to its purely geometric dimension.” Rather than a Gothic cathedral, a more emblematic piece of modern, 21st-century architecture might well be a railway station or a motorway junction, a place of pure infrastructure, which is not meant to be lingered over and appreciated by visitors for any aesthetic qualities, but simply to operate as efficiently as possible. It is meant to become an invisible billboard-supporting structure to facilitate the display of utilitarian messages allowing for an ever-greater ease of human fungibility: highly visible and easily parsed departure screens, ticket terminals, direction signs, speed limits, and so forth.

Houellebecq continues: 

More generally, all contemporary architecture must be considered as an immense apparatus for the acceleration and rationalisation of human movements … the point is to facilitate the establishment of many rapidly renewed relationships (between consumers and products, between employees and companies, between lovers), and thus to produce a consumer fluidity based on an ethic of responsibility, transparency and free choice.

In this same spirit, the anonymous and modular nature of most contemporary city-based office blocks and apartment-based living spaces is intended to demonstrate “total fidelity to the aesthetics of the pigeonhole,” in order to achieve the wider socioeconomic goal of “building the shelves of the social hypermarket.” If I walk past my old Victorian era town hall, now repurposed incongruously as a nightclub, then, due to certain unmistakable features of its 19th-century red-brick architecture, such as ornate columns, façades, and engravings indicating its original purpose, I can tell it was once built to fulfil a certain, very specific role: to embody now quaint-seeming old concepts like civic pride. 

Beyond certain simple features like above-entrance signage, however, designed to be infinitely interchangeable as the building undergoes change of tenants and thus change of usage, contemporary municipal structures betray no specific design for any specific purpose at all. Once the council-tax offices eventually move out for office-space pastures new, the same vacated any-space could end up containing just about whatever, from a telesales department to an insurance brokers to a data-entry centre, and not look out of place for its new and no doubt equally temporary role. The old town hall structure, however, will always seem out of kilter with whatever comes to occupy it next, once the nightclub has finally closed down—far easier, in our new, more temporary society of perpetual change upon point of purest principle, to render the buildings themselves every bit as effortlessly interchangeable as the business tenants who see fit to occupy them for a brief year or two. 

Thus, what is supposed to be most solid becomes least so; that is why, for Houellebecq, traditional building materials like bricks, stone, and mortar, have been replaced instead with what might almost be termed building immaterials instead, those which “show low granular resistance” like metal, glass, and plastics. Not only do these tend to be cheaper, they also make it easier to “create polymorphic, uniform, modular spaces.” The ultimate point of creating a world of modular, transposable spaces, however, is to create a race of equally modular, transposable people—or ‘consumers,’ to give this new post-human species its correct Linnean name.

As Houellebecq explains: 

Versatile, neutral and modular, modern places are adapted to the infinite number of messages they are to transmit. They cannot allow themselves to deliver an autonomous meaning, to evoke a particular atmosphere; they can thus have neither beauty, nor poetry, nor more generally any character of their own. Stripped of all individual and permanent character, and on this condition, they will be ready to welcome the indefinite pulsation of the transient. Mobile, open to transformation, always available, modern employees are undergoing a similar process of depersonalisation … Freed [forcibly!] from the shackles of belonging, loyalty, and rigid codes of behaviour, the modern individual is thus ready to take his place in a system of generalised transactions within which he or she can univocally and unambiguously be given an exchange value.

Just as most modern public buildings could sit equally as well in Dublin, Paris, Tokyo, or Riyadh, so most modern employees of the current-day professional class who rule over us are supposed to be able to fit in, live and work equally as adaptably in Melbourne, Toronto, Beijing, or Brussels. The best way to ensure this is to systematically strip both built environments and people of any permanent localised specificity, thereby transforming the entire urban sector of the planet into one gigantic interchangeable Nowheresville. 

Architects of our own downfall

Like Russell Kirk, HP Lovecraft had a profoundly Gothic mind, and, in his youthful study of all things Lovecraftian, Houellebecq wrote of how: 

Howard Phillips Lovecraft was amongst those few men who experience a violent trancelike state when they look at beautiful architecture … Describing his first impressions of New York to his aunt, he claims he almost fainted with “ecstatic exaltation.” Similarly, when he first looked upon the ridged rooftops of Salem, he saw looming processions of Puritans in black robes, with stern faces and strange conical hats, who were dragging a howling old woman to the pyre.

For Lovecraft, a conservative-minded individual of the highest order, the historic built environment could literally conjure up the spirits of the past: he saw such phantoms there, walking again before his very eyes. When he wrote his own descriptions of the fantastic architecture of alien cities like R’lyeh, therefore, the Gothic-minded Lovecraft was not necessarily condemning it as worthless or hideous at all, as readers may at first presume. 

Although incomprehensible to human eyes, R’lyeh’s Cyclopean, non-Euclidean structures presumably possess some actual meaning to Cthulhu himself, very possibly of a sacred or higher nature, it is just that our limited Earthling brains are structured in such a way so that we cannot perceive it. For Houellebecq: “HP Lovecraft’s architecture, like that of the great cathedrals, like that of Hindu temples, is much more than a three-dimensional mathematical puzzle … It is living architecture, because at its foundation lies a living and emotional concept of the world. In other words, it is sacred architecture.”

With the average steel and glass skyscraper or office building today, no matter how concave, convex, or strangely shaped, it is different: there really is no meaning to it, or at least no higher spiritual one (except possibly as a Temple to Mammon). It’s just an empty exercise in engineering, both literal and social. Hence, R’lyeh’s architecture is actually rather less alien than our own current stuff, in certain key, meaning-based, ways. 

Where would an admirably Gothic Mind like Russell Kirk’s nowadays feel more at home, I wonder? In R’lyeh, or the City of London?

Bishop Challoner's Meditations ~ November 1st

ON THE FEAST OF ALL THE SAINTS

Vidi turbam magnam quam dinumerare nemo poterat, ex omnibus gentibus, stantes ante thronum.

Consider first, that on this day the church of God honours with a solemn festival the virtues, the triumphs and the eternal glory of all the saints and citizens of the heavenly Jerusalem. First, in order to give glory, praise and thanksgiving, on their account, to the God of all the saints, and to his Son Jesus Christ, the author of all their virtues, of all their triumphs, and of all their glory, and to honour the Lord in his saints. Secondly, to encourage all her children to follow the glorious examples of the saints, and to walk in their blessed footsteps, in hopes of arriving one day at their happy company. Thirdly, to teach them to associate themselves in the mean time to the saints, by a holy communion with them, and to procure the assistance of their prayers and intercession. O how just, how pious, how wholesome it is to glorify God in his saints, who are the most excellent of all his works; to honour in them the bright trophies of the blood of Christ; to learn of them the practice of all Christian virtues, and especially of divine love; and to be admitted to share in their powerful prayers, and to a happy communion with them in all that is good! 'You are come,' says the apostle, Heb. xii. 22, & c., speaking to the children of the church, 'to mount Sion, and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to the company of many thousands of angels, and to the church of the first-born, who are written in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of the just made perfect, and to Jesus the mediator of the New Testament,' & c. O happy communion indeed! O joyful festivity, in which the church militant solemnly associates herself with the whole church triumphant, in the worship, praise, and love of their common Lord, through him that is the mediator of them both, and through the great sacrifice of his blood! See then, my soul, what ought to be thy devotion on this day.

Consider 2ndly, on occasion of this festival, what encouragements we here meet with to dedicate ourselves, in good earnest, to the holy service of our God, when we reflect on the eternal weight of glory in heaven, with which he rewards the light and momentary labours and sufferings of his servants here upon earth. All these holy ones, whose feast we celebrate this day, have entered into the never-ending joys of their Lord at a very cheap and easy rate. The yoke of his divine servitude, which they bore for the short time of their pilgrimage, was very sweet to them, and their burden was very light. Grace and love made all things easy that they either did or suffered for their beloved. He himself supported them in such manner as to carry, as it were, both them and their crosses too upon his own shoulders. He never left them in life or death, till he took them to himself to his heavenly kingdom, where they shall live and reign for ever with him. My soul, hast not thou the same God as they had? Hast not thou the same Saviour, Jesus Christ, who has purchased the same kingdom for thee also, with his own most precious blood? Hast not thou the same sacraments and sacrifice, and all the same helps and means of grace as they had? Is the arm of God shortened? Or is the source of his infinite goodness and mercy dried up or diminished? Why then mayest not thou also aspire to the same glory and happiness? The saints carried about with them heretofore the like flesh and blood as thou now dost; but their correspondence with the mercy and grace of God raised them up from the dunghill of their corrupt nature, and made them saints; the like correspondence with the divine mercy and grace can do as much for thee also. O why then shouldst not thou also endeavour to be a saint?

Consider 3rdly, that as it is the love of God which makes saints, so it is the divine love which we particularly honour in all the saints. 'Tis this heavenly love which ought to be the great object of our attention, of our devotion, and of our imitation, on all the festivals of these generous lovers, and beloved of God, and more especially on this day, when we celebrate the virtues of them all under one solemnity. O what strong invitations, what great encouragements have we here, what pressing calls to labour to sanctify our souls with divine love, when we have here set before our eyes all these millions of heavenly lovers whom we honour in this festivity? The blessed virgin the queen and mother of beautiful love; they innumerable legions of angelic spirits, Cherubim and Seraphim, all on fire with love; these patriarchs and prophets, constant and faithful lovers of their God; these apostles of the Lamb, sent by him to spread through all the earth the bright flames of love, which he sent down upon them from heaven; these armies of martyrs, all victims of love, who all laid down their lives for love; these millions of holy confessors, and all these spirits of the just made perfect by love, who both in life and death have been always true friends and servants of divine love - and now, for all eternity, shall shine and burn in its beautiful flames; all these virgins, in fine, the spouses of love, whose love for the Lamb was stronger than death, and who now follow him singing hymns of eternal love, wheresoever he goes. O let us draw near to this great fire, to this heavenly company of seraphic lovers, that our frozen hearts may receive some small heart at least from all their flames.

Conclude ever to love, honour, and imitate the saints of God; but more especially to love in them what God loves in them; that is the gifts of his divine grace; amongst which the most excellent is love. Then shall thou be best entitled both to the intercession of the saints at present, and to their happy society hereafter.

1 November, Antonio, Cardinal Bacci: Meditations For Each Day

The Feast of All Saints

1. Today's feast should inspire in us a burning desire to become holy. Men long for many things in this world, things which are often useless and even sinful. They desire riches, pleasure, honours, success and material comfort. These things may be lawful, but they cannot satisfy the human heart which is made for God. Whenever we achieve any of our ambitions in this world, are we in fact happy or even perfectly satisfied? The truth is that we are not, because the soul is greater than the objects which surround us. God alone can fill and satisfy it.
Sanctity should be our principal ambition. We should yearn to be more closely united to God so that His Divinity may be reflected in our thoughts and in our actions. If we enjoy God's friendship, we shall become more like God and shall be lifted up above petty mundane considerations. Perhaps we doubt our ability to reach such a high spiritual level? Even so, we should nevertheless desire to reach it, and not just, in a passing and indifferent manner, but constantly and actively. We should keep our desire alive by repeating it to ourselves and by continually praying for God's grace to fulfil it. "I intend to become holy," said little Dominic Savio, and he kept the promise which he had made to God. Many people have formed the same resolution, both desert hermits and University professors, both humble workmen and rulers of nations. Since we ought to have the same intention, what is there to prevent us? Let us make this resolution now and put it into effect with the help of God.

2. God addressed the same command to all of us. “You shall make and keep yourselves holy, because I am holy.” (Lev. 11:44; Peter 1:16) “You are to be perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect." (Mt. 5:48)

We are all obliged to strive to become holy, to work hard towards this  end, and to ask for the grace to sustain us in our efforts. We should not say that sanctity is impossible for us, because everything is possible with God's help. Let us imagine that we are in Heaven and can behold the innumerable choirs of the Blessed enjoying the unlimited and unending happiness of God's company. Nevertheless, they were once people like ourselves, with the same passions, failings, and temptations. They fought valiantly, supported by the grace of God; they conquered and were awarded the palm of victory. Now they enjoy everlasting happiness. Let us remember the words of St. Augustine: "If others, why not I?" If they succeeded in becoming holy, why cannot I do likewise?

3. In these days when the Church is so anxious to foster devotion to the Saints, let us fervently invoke their patronage. They arc our brothers and they reach out lovingly to assist us, because they desire us to share in their glory.

As we know, the Church is threefold. There is the Church militant, to which we belong; there is the Church suffering, which consists of the souls in Purgatory; and there is the Church triumphant, which is made up of the Blessed in Heaven. The bond of charity unites all three divisions. We who are still on earth have brothers and sisters in eternal glory who love us and intercede for us. Let us pray to them fervently and constantly. Above all, let us seek to imitate the sanctity which won such glory for them.

Eastern Rite ~ Feasts of 1 November AM 7533

Today is the Feast of the Holy Wonderworkers and Unmercenaries Cosmas and Damian, the Commemoration of the Passing into Eternal Life of Blessed Theodore Romzha, Bishop of Mukachevo, and Martyr, and the Commemoration of the Passing into Eternal Life of the Venerable Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytsky.

✠✠✠✠✠

The Holy Wonderworkers and Unmercenary Physicians Cosmas and Damian and their mother Saint Theodota were natives of Asia Minor (some sources say Mesopotamia). Their pagan father died while they were still quite small children. Their mother raised them in Christian piety. Through her own example, and by reading holy books to them, Saint Theodota preserved her children in purity of life according to the command of the Lord, and Cosmas and Damian grew up into righteous and virtuous men.

Trained and skilled as physicians, they received from the Holy Spirit the gift of healing people’s illnesses of body and soul by the power of prayer. They even treated animals. With fervent love for both God and neighbour, they never took payment for their services. They strictly observed the command of our Lord Jesus Christ, “Freely have you received, freely give.” (Mt. 10:8). The fame of Saints Cosmas and Damian spread throughout all the surrounding region, and people called them unmercenary physicians.

Once, the saints were summoned to a grievously ill woman named Palladia, whom all the doctors had refused to treat because of her seemingly hopeless condition. Through faith and through the fervent prayer of the holy brothers, the Lord healed the deadly disease and Palladia got up from her bed perfectly healthy and giving praise to God. In gratitude for being healed and wishing to give them a small gift, Palladia went quietly to Damian. She presented him with three eggs and said, “Take this small gift in the Name of the Holy Life-Creating Trinity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” Hearing the Name of the Holy Trinity, the unmercenary one did not dare to refuse.

When Saint Cosmas learned what had happened, became very sad, for he thought that his brother had broken their strict vow. On his deathbed, he gave instructions that his brother should not be buried beside him. Saint Damian also died shortly afterwards, and everyone wondered where Saint Damian’s grave should be. But through the will of God, a miracle occurred. A camel, which the saints had treated for its wildness, spoke with a human voice saying that they should have no doubts about whether to place Damian beside Cosmas because Damian did not accept the eggs from the woman as payment, but out of respect for the Name of God. The venerable relics of the holy brothers were buried together at Thereman (Mesopotamia).

Many miracles were worked after the death of the holy unmercenaries. There lived at Thereman, near the church of Cosmas and Damian, a certain man by the name of Malchus. One day he went on a journey, leaving his wife all alone for what would be a long time. He prayerfully entrusted her to the heavenly protection of the holy brothers. But the Enemy of the race of mankind took on the appearance of one of Malchus’ friends and planned to kill the woman. A certain time went by, and this man went to her at home and said that Malchus had sent him to bring her to him. The woman believed him and went along. He led her to a solitary place intending to kill her. The woman, seeing that disaster threatened her, called upon God with deep faith.

Two fiercesome men then appeared, and the devil let go of the woman and fled, falling off a cliff. The two men led the woman home. At her own home, bowing to them deeply she asked, “My rescuers, to whom I shall be grateful to the end of my days, what are your names?”

They replied, “We are the servants of Christ, Cosmas and Damian,” and became invisible. The woman with trembling and with joy told everyone about what had happened to her. Glorifying God, she went up to the icon of the holy brothers and tearfully offered prayers of thanksgiving for her deliverance. And from that time the holy brothers were venerated as protectors of the holiness and inviolability of Christian marriage, and as givers of harmony to conjugal life. From ancient times, their veneration spread also to Russia.

The Unmercenary Saints Cosmas and Damian of Asia Minor should not be confused with the Unmercenary Saints Cosmas and Damian of Rome (July 1), or the Unmercenary Saints Cosmas and Damian of Arabia (October 17).

Troparion — Tone 8

Holy unmercenaries and wonderworkers, Cosmas and Damian, / heal our infirmities. / Freely you have received; freely you give to us.

Kontakion — Tone 2

Having received the grace of healing, / you grant healing to those in need. / Glorious wonder-workers and healers, Cosmas and Damian, / visit us and put down the insolence of our enemies, / and bring healing to the world through your miracles.
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I love you, O Lord, my strength; You are my stronghold and my refuge! (Psalm 18:2-3)

These were the words which Bishop Theodore G. Romzha, the Apostolic Administrator of the Mukachevo Eparchy (1944-1947) 
chose as the motto for his episcopal ministry. At the age of 33, he faced one of the most brutal and bloody persecutions of a Christian community in modern times, ultimately making the ultimate sacrifice for his flock and his faith.

Bishop Theodore G. Romzha was born of humble parentage on April 14, 1911, in Velikij Bychkiv, in the heart of the colourful district of Maramorosh, Subcarpathian Ruthenia. He was a pious and gifted young boy, and his only ambition was to become a priest. He received his secondary education at the gymnasium (high school) in Chust. Due to his friendly disposition and scholastic achievements he became one of the most popular students. His popularity increased, even more, when he proved himself as an all-around athlete, excelling in soccer. At his graduation, he took everybody by surprise when he announced his intention of becoming a priest; and was sent to Rome for his priestly formation.

He lived at the German-Hungarian College in Rome for the first two years of his studies; then, in 1932, he moved to the Russian Pontifical Seminary, known as the "Russicum," in order to prepare himself for missionary work in Soviet Russia. It was indeed a providential step since at the "Russicum" he was expected to study communist atheism and its ideology; unwittingly preparing himself for the Soviet occupation of his native land. He was ordained to the priesthood in Rome on Christmas Day, December 25, 1936.

In the summer of the following year, he came home to celebrate his first Divine Liturgy in his own country with the intention of returning to finish his doctoral dissertation. But instead of returning to Rome, he was drafted into military service and sent to protect his country against the German invasion. To his friend in Rome, he confided: "I am going to the front with a deep conviction of doing the will of God. Therefore, I do not fear what will happen to me."

After Father Romzha's discharge from the army in August 1938, the danger of another approaching war remained. For this reason, Bishop Alexander Stojka (1932-1943) did not permit him to leave the country but appointed him to a forgotten parish in Berezovo, Maramorosh District, where the young Father Romzha became a poor pastor among poor people. There were times when he could afford only one meal a day while donating from his own purse to help his needy parishioners. To a curious friend in Rome he wrote: "I live here as a pauper and yet I feel happy and satisfied." Father Romzha was a good and dedicated priest, teaching his parishioners to know and live their Faith by his own example.

In March 1939, the Hungarians occupied Subcarpathian Ruthenia by force, precipitating both political and ecclesiastical changes. Bishop Stojka was forced by the Hungarian government to reorganize the seminary; and in the fall of 1939, Father Romzha was appointed Spiritual Director and Professor of Philosophy at the Eparchial Seminary in Uzhorod. One of his students later recalled: "He was strict and demanding as a Professor, but as a Spiritual Director he was fatherly and kind. He knew how to inspire us and bring out the best in us. Staying in close contact with us, his students, he was able to transplant into our hearts the main features of his strong priestly character: his dedication, genuine piety and generosity of heart."

Even at the seminary, Father Romzha found time for pastoral work by assisting in neighbouring parishes and conducting missions and retreats for young students. Every penny he earned he generously distributed to the poor. To the mentioned friend in Rome, he wrote: "I am living very unpretentiously, and yet my pockets are always empty. But I am not discouraged, since I am working not for the money but to please God." Bishop Stojka greatly appreciated the dedicated work of Father Romzha, and in 1942 obtained for him Papal honours. Even so, he remained a humble and dedicated priest, inspiring and winning the admiration and respect of all those who met him.

On May 31, 1943, during a critical time during the war, Bishop Alexander Stojka suddenly died. In view of the uncertainties of the time, the Holy See appointed Bishop Nicholas Dudash, OSBM, of Hajdudorog, as the temporary administrator of the Mukachevo Eparchy. While the Soviet army was rapidly approaching the Carpathian Mountains, the Holy See promptly appointed Archpriest Theodore G. Romzha to succeed Bishop Dudash as the Apostolic Administrator of Mukachevo; and his episcopal consecration took place in Uzhorod, September 24, 1944. A month later, the entire territory of the Mukachevo Eparchy was occupied by the Red Army. Bishop Romzha was informed that Subcarpathian Ruthenia would be incorporated into postwar Czechoslovakia as an autonomous province; however, it soon became evident that the Soviets would not relinquish this politically strategic region. Consequently, on June 29, 1945, Subcarpathian Ruthenia was officially incorporated into Soviet Ukraine; and the young and inexperienced Bishop Romzha found himself and his flock under Soviet rule.

At first, Bishop Romzha tried not to antagonize the Soviet authorities, in spite of abusive and violent actions committed by the Soviet soldiers against the clergy; but when the Soviet authorities started to expel priests from their parishes at random and confiscate church property, he was forced to protest. The Soviets had a ready answer: to ensure the continuance of his ministry and the safety of his clergy, Bishop Romzha must renounce all allegiance to the Holy See, place himself under the jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Moscow and encourage his flock to do the same. Bishop Romzha immediately replied: "I would rather die than betray my Church!" Thus began the open persecution of the Byzantine Catholic Church in Subcarpathia. In the fall of 1945, Patriarch Alexis of Moscow appointed Bishop Nestor Sydoruk of Umany to head the Orthodox Eparchy of Mukachevo. Nestor was announced by the Soviet press to be the only legally appointed bishop and received full support from the Soviet authorities. Intimidation and imprisonment of Byzantine Catholic priests followed, and the official liquidation of the Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo was underway.

Rather than flee, Bishop Romzha decided to fight. Although the Soviet authorities confiscated his car, he travelled long distances by horse and buggy, just to reassure his faithful and to encourage them to persevere until death, saying, "They are taking from us our own priests and churches, but they will never be able to take away our faith from us." During these extensive and dangerous visitations, Bishop Romzha tried to sustain the faith of the weak, to reassure the wavering, and to plead with those intimidated: "Faith is our greatest treasure on this earth. To preserve our faith we must even be ready to lay down our life. If we must die, then let us die as true martyrs, defending our faith. One thing is sure: that we never will abandon our faith nor betray our Church." The faithful, supported by dedicated clergy, responded enthusiastically and stood united behind their fearless shepherd. Even some Orthodox parishes, seeing the violence and injustice perpetrated by the Soviets, asked Bishop Romzha to accept them back into the Catholic fold.

During these days of violence and open persecution, Bishop Romzha offered his prayers and sufferings for the perseverance of his clergy and the faithful he risked so much to serve. He was sustained by his unshakable confidence in God's Providence; and down deep in his courageous heart he vividly felt the protection of the Theotokos, the Mother of God. There was no power that could shake his loyalty to the Holy See; in his mind, there was only "one, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church," established by our Lord on the rock of Peter and governed by His Vicar on the earth. For this truth, Bishop Romzha was ready to sacrifice his own life.

Unable to intimidate Bishop Romzha, the Soviets decided to liquidate him and staged a highway accident. The horse-drawn carriage in which the Bishop was returning home from the rededication of the parish church of Lavki, near Mukachevo, was rammed by a military truck. Bishop Romzha was badly injured, but survived; and passersby took him to the hospital in Mukachevo where, after a few days, he began to regain his strength. Then suddenly, early on the morning of November 1, 1947, he was found dead.

The night before Bishop Romzha's death, the director of the hospital and a strange nurse, who had disappeared the next day, were seen entering the Bishop's room about midnight. The Soviet authorities announced that Bishop Romzha died from injuries suffered in his highway accident; but a later investigation showed that he had, in fact, been poisoned.

Blessed Theodore Romzha was beatified by Pope John Paul II on June 27, 2001. His relics are enshrined in Holy Cross Cathedral in Uzhorod, Transcarpathia.

His Grace, Bishop John Kudrick of Parma, has compiled a devotional booklet entitled A Prayer Journey Through the Great Lenten Fast and Great and Holy Week, Inspired by Blessed Theodore Romzha. For more information, please contact the Eparchy of Parma Office of Evangelization, 1900 Carlton Road., Parma, Ohio 44134.
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Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky was born Count Roman Alexander Maria Sheptytsky in 1865 in the Ukrainian village of Prylbychi. The son of a Polonized (and therefore Latinized) Ukrainian Aristocrat, Jan Sheptytsky and Sophia Fredro (daughter of the Polish literary figure), he was conscious of the fact that his ancestors included some notable bishops and Metropolitans of the Greco-Catholic Church of Kyiv. After many obstacles created by his father, the young Count Sheptytsky was able to enter the Ukrainian monastery of the Order of Saint Basil the Great (OSBM) in 1891 and accepted the monastic name, Andrey. In 1900 he was made Bishop of Stanyslaviv and shortly afterwards, at the age of 36, became the Metropolitan, i.e. the ranking hierarch of the Ukrainian Greco-Catholic Church. He remained at this post until his death on 1 November 1944.

His life was an example of heroic virtue. An extremely active pastor, who used his personal wealth to fund thousands of philanthropic projects, he was also a man of deep prayer. A gifted preacher and prolific writer, he reached out to his people constantly, teaching uneducated peasants the basics of hygiene and agricultural techniques, and dialoguing with the intelligentsia among his own people and the cultured classes of all Europe. He travelled widely, visiting his flock in Western Europe, North and South America, and seeing to it that they would have bishops of their own to take care of them. Never of good health, his last fifteen years were a constant agony of pain and paralysis. Even so, he valiantly led his Church through extremely difficult and oppressive times.

His two great passions in life were the restoration of authentic Eastern Christian Monasticism in his Church, (which he achieved through the creation of monasteries following the Studite Typicon) and the union of Churches. He specifically laboured at Orthodox-Catholic reconciliation, decades before this became fashionable. For this he was often looked upon as dangerous and insufficiently loyal to Rome. He was, however, a firm believer in a strong papacy, which caused many Orthodox to mistrust this saintly man as well, even though he loved them dearly and stood up for them when they were persecuted. He valued education (having the equivalent of three doctorates himself) and founded the L’viv Theological Academy in 1929, naming Fr. Josyf Slipyj as its rector. This same man would later be Metropolitan Andrey’s coadjutor and successor, and a direct heir to many of Metropolitan Andrey’s great dreams and aspirations.

Metropolitan Andrey led his flock of some five million faithful through two world wars. He was arrested by the Czarist forces in World War I. Polish and Nazi German authorities would keep him under house arrest in later years. He courageously saved many Jews from the Nazis during World War II. Metropolitan Andrey died as the Red Army occupied his city of L’viv once again in 1944. Before his death, he predicted the annihilation of the Ukrainian Greco-Catholic Church and its eventual resurrection. Both his predictions came true. In 1946 the Soviet Secret Police, with the assistance of the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church staged a pseudo-council of the Ukrainian Church, during which a small group of frightened clergy voted to liquidate their Church and join the Moscow Patriarchate. No Ukrainian Greco-Catholic bishop ever agreed to this. For almost half a century, the Ukrainian Greco-Catholic Church was the world’s largest outlawed religious body. As the Soviet Union crumbled, this Church came out of the Catacombs with over five million faithful, thousands of priests and over three thousand parishes. Many believe this survival of the Church in Ukraine to be a miracle worked by Metropolitan Andrey. The cause for his beatification and canonization is underway.

Metropolitan Andrey believed in the necessity of the Union of Churches, to be achieved through mutual understanding and sacrificial love, as well as a return to the sources of the faith. He enjoined all people to pray for God’s Wisdom. His life and his legacy are an inspiration to the staff and students of the Institute that bears his name.

IN LUMINE FIDEI: 1 NOVEMBER – ALL SAINTS


IN LUMINE FIDEI: 1 NOVEMBER – ALL SAINTS: Dom Prosper Guéranger: The bells ring out as joyously as on the brightest days. They announce the great solemnity of the closing Cycle...

1 November, The Chesterton Calendar

NOVEMBER 1st
ALL SAINTS' DAY

You cannot deny that it is perfectly possible that to-morrow morning in Ireland or in Italy there might appear a man not only as good but good in exactly the same way as St. Francis of Assisi. Very well; now take the other types of human virtue: many of them splendid. The English gentleman of Elizabeth was chivalrous and idealistic. But can you stand still in this meadow and be an English gentleman of Elizabeth? The austere republican of the eighteenth century, with his stern patriotism and his simple life, was a fine fellow. But have you ever seen him? Have you ever seen an austere republican? Only a hundred years have passed and that volcano of revolutionary truth and valour is as cold as the mountains of the moon. And so it will be with the ethics which are buzzing down Fleet Street at this instant as I speak. What phrase would inspire a London clerk or workman just now? Perhaps that he is a son of the British Empire on which the sun never sets; perhaps that he is a prop of his Trades Union, or a class-conscious proletarian something or other; perhaps merely that he is a gentleman, when he obviously is not. Those names and notions are all honourable, but how long will they last? Empires break; industrial conditions change; the suburbs will not last for ever. What will remain? I will tell you: the Catholic saint will remain.

'The Ball and the Cross.'

1 November, The Holy Rule of St Benedict, Patriarch of Western Monasticism

CHAPTER XXV. Of Graver Faults

2 Mar. 2 July. 1 Nov.

Let that brother who is found guilty of a more grievous offence be excluded both  from the table and from the Oratory, and let none of the brethren consort with him or speak to him. Let him be alone at the work enjoined him, and continue in penance and sorrow, remembering that dreadful sentence of the Apostle, “That such a one is delivered over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord.” Let him take his portion of food alone, in the measure and at the time that the Abbot shall think best for him. Let none of those who pass by bless him, nor the food that is given him.

2 November, The Roman Martyrology


Quarto Nonas Novémbris Luna tricésima Anno Dómini 2024
On the morrow is made the Commemoration of all the faithful departed.

November 2nd 2024, the 30th day of the Moon, were born into the better life:

Holy Victorinus, Bishop of Poitiers, who, after publishing many writings, as witnesseth holy Jerome, was crowned with martyrdom in the persecution under the Emperor Diocletian.
At Trieste, blessed Justus, who, in the same persecution, was martyred under the President Manatius.
At Sebaste, under the Emperor Licinius, the holy martyrs Carterius, Styriacus, Tobias, Eudoxius, Agapius, and their Companions.
In Persia, the holy martyrs Acindynus, Pegasius, Aphthonius, Elpidephorus, and Anempodistus, with many others their Companions.
In Africa, the holy martyrs Publius, Victor, Hermes, and Papias.
At Tarsus, in Cilicia, under the Emperor Julian the Apostate, the holy Virgin and martyr Eustochium, who, after grievous torments, gave up her soul in prayer to God.
At Laodicea, in Syria, (in the year 334) holy Theodotus, Bishop (of that see,) who excelled not in word only, but in deed and in power.
At Vienne, (in the seventh century,) holy George, Bishop (of that see.)
In the monastery of St. Moritz, in Switzerland, (in the sixth century,) the holy Abbot Ambrose.
At Cyrus, in Syria, the holy Confessor Marcian, (fourth century.)
℣. And elsewhere many other holy martyrs, confessors, and holy virgins.
℟. Thanks be to God.

Meme of the Moment

Today is the Feast of All Saints.

Compline

From St Thomas Aquinas Seminary. You may follow the Office at Divinum Officium.

Archbishop of Canterbury Endorses Homosexual Activity Within a ‘Committed Relationship’

Why is anyone surprised? Welby is a layman playing dress up, who is living proof that "Whoever marries the spirit of this age will find himself a widower in the next." ~ William Ralph Inge, Dean of St Paul's (Anglican) Cathedral

From LifeSiteNews

By Emily Mangiaracina

Archbishop Justin Welby’s comments sparked backlash from within the Anglican Communion and deepened division caused by what a group of Anglicans called ‘radical departures from the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.’

The Archbishop of Canterbury defied the teachings of Scripture and the Anglican Church by claiming that sex is permissible within a homosexual relationship and that same-sex couples can be blessed in church.

“All sexual activity should be within a committed relationship … whether it’s straight or gay,” said Justin Welby, the leading cleric of the worldwide Anglican Communion, in a recent interview on “The Rest is Politics,” a podcast hosted by Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart. 

Campbell is a former spokesman, press secretary and director of communications and strategy for former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Stewart is a former Member of Parliament of the Conservative Party.

Welby continued, alleging that a same-sex couple can be “married” and advocating for their blessing by the Anglican Church: “We’re not giving up on the idea sex is within marriage or civil partnership or whether marriage is civil or religious and that, therefore, we’ve put forward a proposal that where people have been through a civil partnership or a same-sex marriage … they should be able to come along to a church and have a service of prayer and blessing for them in their lives together.”

Anglican Ink noted that these remarks were Welby’s “clearest” yet on homosexuality. In 2017, Campbell had asked Welby whether gay sex is sinful, to which the archbishop famously said, “I can’t give a straight answer.”

Homosexual relations are repeatedly condemned in Scripture, in both the Old Testament and New Testament, as a grave violation of God’s law and an “abomination.” 

St. Paul writes, “For this reason God gave them up to degrading passions. Their women exchanged natural intercourse for unnatural, and in the same way also the men, giving up natural intercourse with women, were consumed with passion for one another. Men committed shameless acts with men and received in their own persons the due penalty for their error.” (Rom. 1:23-27)

In accordance with Scripture, the Church of England (CofE) officially teaches that “sexual intercourse, as an expression of faithful intimacy, properly belongs within marriage exclusively,” defining marriage as a lifelong union between “one man with one woman.” 

As Anglican Ink noted, Welby’s comments are “a clear departure from CofE doctrine on marriage and sexual ethics, and from the Global Anglican Communion, and from the historic position of every other Christian denomination across the world, and the clear teaching of the Bible.”

Anglican Ink remarked, “Welby uses the classic postmodern defence of sincerity. We should all respect his views because he is sincere. But many apostates are sincere.”

The departure of leading Anglican prelates from fundamental Christian teaching has led to a fracture within the Anglican Communion as well as the defection of a significant number of clergy to the Catholic Church — such as that of former Anglican bishop Michael Nazir-Ali in 2021 — assisted since the establishment of the Ordinariate by Pope Benedict XVI in 2011.

After Welby’s recent comments, The Alliance, a cohort of Church of England groups that hold to Biblical teaching on sexuality has written to the Anglican bishops, noting that they have begun setting up a de facto parallel province within the Church of England in response to the de facto change in doctrine.”

Last year, Anglican bishops throughout the world declared their communion with the Anglican Church of England to be “broken” over its support of same-sex “marriage” and its official approval of a liturgical rite of blessing for same-sex unions.

The declaration came in a statement issued by the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans’ fourth Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON) held in Rwanda. The 1,300 attending delegates represented an estimated 85% of the world’s Anglicans.

“The current divisions in the Anglican Communion have been caused by radical departures from the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. Some within the Communion have been taken captive by hollow and deceptive philosophies of this world (Colossians 2:8). Such a failure to hear and heed God’s Word undermines the mission of the church as a whole,” the GAFCON IV statement said.

A group of 12 Anglican leaders had just previously publicly rejected Welby as the spiritual head of the Church of England after he permitted blessings for same-sex unions.