Anglican clergy identifying themselves as within the Catholic
tradition used to have all sorts of “tribal” habits, in dress,
speech and style of life, to set them apart from those they thought
of as less enlightened. No-one is going to regret that we have begun
to grow up a bit in that respect. As the profile of ordained ministry
in the Anglican Church has changed, many of the old markers have
gone; and not the least important change has been the admission of
women to the priesthood, a development welcomed by many who hold
firmly Catholic convictions about the work of our redemption and the
sacraments in which this work comes to life in us.
But to think of yourself as a Catholic in the ordained Anglican
ministry still involves reflection and discipline, attention to how
you live and pray and how you support one another in ministry. The
Society of Catholic Priests exists because clergy in the Catholic
tradition who are happy to affirm recent developments in the life of
our church feel the need for common disciplines of prayer and
thinking that will help them resist some of the managerial or
functional language about ministry that has become popular of late -
but without reinventing the old tribalism.
If you believe that ordained ministry in the Anglican Church is
part of the continuing witness of the whole Christian and Catholic
tradition, Eastern and Western; if you believe that the priestly task
is to be what Austin Farrer called a walking sacrament' (not just a
leader or co-ordinator or even teacher); and if you also believe that
the specific shape of this priesthood can properly develop as the
Church moves on, to include those among the baptised who have
regularly been excluded, SCP exists to help you flourish as a deacon,
priest or bishop in the Anglican Church.
The Most Rev'd Rowan Williams
the 104th Archbishop of Canterbury and Society Patron