Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Showing posts with label Oxford Ordinariate Mission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oxford Ordinariate Mission. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 November 2015

Ordinariate Acolytes


Earlier this evening I attended the Ordinariate Mass at Holy Rood here in Oxford at which Jonathan Creer and Thomas Mason were admitted as Lectors and Acolytes by the Ordinary, Mgr Keith Newton.

Jonathan and Thomas are now studying at Oscott, but in addition to some students from there who had come to support them there were Oratorians, Dominicans and Franciscans sitting in choir who were their fellow students at Blackfriars in previous years.

The Mass was well attended and it was an opportunity to see the Ordinary celebrate in pontificals the Ordinariate Rite.

At the reception afterwards it was an opportunity to congratulate the new Lectors-Acolytes and to catch up with friends.

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Our Lady of Walsingham


Last Thursday, September 24th, was the Feast of Our Lady of Walsingham. As someone who both as an Anglican and as a Catholic has been there many times on day or week Pilgrimages or the Anglican National Pilgrimage - at which event I was once crucifer when Pusey House provided the serving team - I am delighted that it now merits its own specific place in the calendar under the Walsingham title.


Our Lady of Walsingham

Image: Wikipedia

It is a good day upon which to give thanks for the Shrine, for its re-establishment as a significant place of popular pilgrimage in the twentieth century, and to pray for my fellow pilgrims over the years. As it is also the anniversary of my mother's birth it is also a good day and association upon which to pray and give thanks for her.

In the afternoon I attended a book launch at Blackfriars of a new book on the origins of the shrine, entitled Edith the Fair and published by Gracewing, it was written by Bill Flint, who died last year. The launch was by his widow and daughter, and followed on from one at Walsingham itself a while ago. Bill Flint set himself to uncover identity of the figure normally known as Richeldis. His conclusion is that the visionary/foundress was Edith the Fair, the wife of King Harold II, who was the lady of the manor before the 1066 invasion, and would have been in the traditional date of foundation, 1061.

I bought a copy of the book and read it over the following two days. The basic argument, using Domesday and will and charter evidence, is appealing, and resolves questions as to the date and origin. Flint also gives in its complete form, and with a modern transliteration the Pynson ballad text, which first appeared about 1490. This is useful for anyone else interested in unravelling the story of Walsingham. He has interesting things to say about the symbolism of the statue.

It is clear that Bill Flint loved Walsingham - it is indeed a lovable place - and sought to make an offering to Our Lady by his work.

That said I feel I must add that I think the book would have benefited by both stylistic copy-editing to avoid its tendency to restate its argument and to set out the case being made more clearly. I think it also needed editing by or with a historian who could have avoided unnecessary errors and enhanced the understanding of the period under consideration.

I was surprised that no use was made of the archaeological evidence - easily available in print in a booklet on sale, so far as I know to this day in Walsingham - which points to the original Holy House having been built of split tree trunks, like the surviving Anglo-Saxon nave at Greensted in Essex. Excavations revealed that the paving of the late medieval enclosing New Work , built to protect the original chapel, fitted around an inner wall with a distinctive scalloped profile.


The nave at Greensted

Image:spanglefish.com

That would reinforce a pre-Conquest date rather than a mid-twelfth century one for the foundation and building, and confirm the references in the Pynson ballad to carpenters working on the original chapel.

This evening I attended the transferred feast day Sung Mass of Our Lady of Walsingham offered by the Ordinariate at Holy Rood here in Oxford. As with so many pilgrimages to Walsingham this was a good occasion to meet up with friends, and to give thanks for the message and reality of Walsingham. it also reminded me that it is a while since I was there and that I ought to go again.

Our Lady of Walsingham, pray for us.



Friday, 20 February 2015

EF Mass at Holy Rood


This lunchtime I attended the EF Mass at Holy Rood in Oxford.

The Mass had been organised between the new parish priest, Fr Stanislaw Gibzinski, and the Oxford Ordinariate group. The parish website can be seen at  Holy Rood, Oxford - Thames Isis.

The celebrant was Fr Daniel Lloyd from the Ordinariate.

By everyone's reckoning this was the first such celebration of the Tridentine form in nearly fifty years in the church. By the mid-sixties the variations of the interim rite were appearing and certainly this was the first Mass from the Missal promulgated in 1962 by St John XXIII since the introduction of the Missal of Pope Paul VI in 1970.

Although there was not an enormous congregation - although some people had made the effort to come from  other parts of the city - this was the first of a series advertised for Lent, and on Friday lunchtime, so it was a good base upon which to build.


Wednesday, 21 May 2014

Ordinariate Evensong in Oxford next week


On Wednesday May 28th the Oxford Ordinariate Group  - or Mission as it is now styled - will celebrate their termly Solemn Evensong and Benediction at Blackfriars at 7.30. The service will be a votive of Our Lady to mark the Marian month of May. 

The preacher will be Fr Daniel Lloyd, and the music provided by the Newman Consort.

There will be refreshments afterwards in the Priory.

If you have not attended one of these syntheses of the Anglican office in the context of the Catholic Church and appreciate fine music you will be assured of a warm welcome.



Image: Ordinariate website

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Ordinariate Evensong this Wednesday


The Oxford Ordinariate Mission will hold their termly service of Solemn Evensong and Benediction at Blackfriars on St Giles this coming Wednesday, March 12th at 7.30pm. The preacher will be Msgr. Andrew Burnham, and the music provided by the Newman Consort.

Evensong, page 1 

Merbecke's The Book of Common Prayer Noted - 1550

Image;justus.anglican.org


This is an opportunity to experience the Ordinariate Office in the prayerful setting of the church at Blackfriars, and to see how the Ordinariate has blended the BCP with the Roman Office. A way of introducing Anglican friends who might be thinking about the possibilities the Ordinariate offers to see what it does, and perhaps to think more deeply about joining.