The Hope of my Roman Catholic Friends

I know so many Roman Catholics. I minister to a lot of Roman Catholics. A number of Roman Catholics minister to me, bringing me life and joy and love.

Those relationships mean that I live with their hope.

The news that the pope was going to retire brought that hope out into the open. It is an extraordinary moment where a conservative pope has, in his last major act, redefined the papacy as we know it for our lifetimes. From now on, those who select a pope will not presume that person must go on through the weariness of old age to death. They have new expectations that could well lead to younger popes and that makes the hopes of those I love rise.

And that hope is almost unbearable to behold.

I’ve just heard that Keith Patrick O’Brien has resigned in the wake of a number of allegations being made against him by three priests and an ex-priest. (Such talk has been doing the round privately for some time). I understand that he disputes these allegations.

The Roman Catholic Church needs now to say how these allegations will be investigated. The now ex-Cardinal’s resignation doesn’t remove the need for those who have brought these allegations to hear the truth spoken, whatever that truth may be.

Though I am not immediately with Roman Catholic friends, I can feel their hope rising for a different kind of leadership.

The opposition that the Roman Catholic Church has made to gay couples being able to be married has been pretty vile and some things that have been said have come from the mouth of Keith Patrick O’Brien who was named a Stonewall’s Bigot of the Year in 2012. If these allegations are proved to be true, people will call him worse than that this time. If not, then he has been unjustly and horribly accused.

I take no pleasure from his departure and I don’t think I know anyone in any of the churches who will. This brings none of us any good.

Today I bind my prayers with the aching hopes of so many Roman Catholics I love. And I leave all I say and think about these things there.

Pope Shenouda III – RIP

Just heard the news that Pope Shenouda III of the Coptic Church has died in Egypt at the age of 88 after being the Coptic Pope for 41 years.

Just before being ordained, I spent some time in Egypt and one of the evenings I remember most positively from that time in my life was an evening spent in the Coptic Cathedral in Cairo at one of Shenouda’s bible studies.

The deal was, if you wanted a bible study with the pope, you just turned up on a Wednesday evening. That is an extraordinary thought and some of the things I saw that evening still inspire me in my cathedral ministry now. Using a Cathedral as a place of renewal in that way is directly connected with the day I’ve just spent today on our Diocesan Pilgrimage Day. When I went to Pope Shenouda’s bible study there were about 5000 other folk there.

We are working up to that.

Pope Shenouda knew how to use a little razzle-dazzle to attract people and had a fair dose of wisdom to impart on them when he had attracted their attention. I particularly remember him arriving at something of a trot in the Cathedral to great whoops, ullulations and cheering about an hour after the evening had started. There was no doubt he was a hero and in his eyes the light of faith burned brightly.

Shenouda and I wouldn’t have seen eye to eye about terribly much. I well remember one of the monks in Egypt saying something like, “Well, all you Anglicans are heretics anyway. Some are worse heretics than others though.”

Notwithstanding differences in moral outlook, I’ve a huge admiration for what Shenouda and others have achieved in the Coptic church. They know what mission is about. They know it starts with adult Christian education and are proof positive that you can make an unlikely church flourish on Bible Study and an extraordinary passion for the liturgy. We would do well to think about how they’ve done it.

I’m sorry to hear of Pope Shenouda’s passing. I was once a guest in his guest house. He has now gone to a place with many mansions. I’ll remember to say a wee prayer for him tomorrow. The odd prayer of thanksgiving from a distant heretic can’t do any harm.