PERSONAL
ORDINARIATE
OF
OUR
LADY
OF
WALSINGHAM
PRESS
RELEASE
Tuesday
17
January
2012
For
Immediate
Release
For
further
details
please
contact
the
Communications
Officer:
The
Reverend
James
Bradley
([email protected])
AN
AUSPICIOUS
DAY
MARKED
IN
NEWMANS
PULPIT
A
former
Anglican
priest
and
member
of
the
Personal
Ordinariate
of
Our
Lady
of
Walsingham
gave
the
Latin
Sermon
at
the
University
of
Oxford
this
weekend.
John
Hunwicke,
who
is
well
known
for
his
erudite
writing
on
liturgy
and
Classics,
gave
the
sermon
-
not
a
sermon
in
the
usual
ecclesiastical
sense
-
in
the
University
Church
of
St
Mary
the
Virgin
on
Sunday
15
January,
the
first
anniversary
of
the
establishment
of
the
Personal
Ordinariate
of
Our
Lady
of
Walsingham,
with
the
permission
and
blessing
of
the
Ordinary.
Whilst
still
an
Anglican,
Blessed
John
Henry
Newman
(who
is
the
patron
of
the
Ordinariate)
was
the
Vicar
of
St
Mary's
and
it
was
from
the
same
pulpit
that
he
preached
and
John
Keble
gave
his
Assize
Sermon,
that
the
Latin
Sermon
is
given.
John
Hunwicke
joins
other
Catholics,
including
Professor
Richard
Parish,
in
giving
the
Latin
Sermon.
ENDS
The
full
text
and
an
English
paraphrase
is
given
below:
Sunt
autem,
Oxonienses,
et
alii
pro
quibus
Omnipotentem
deprecari
possimus.
Mensis
enim
Ianuarii
dies
iam
quintus
decimus
lucescit;
qui
dies
quamquam
non
omnibus
candidus
laetitiam
tamen
nonnullis
haud
minimam
adferre
debet.
Nam
annus
unus
elapsus
est
ab
illo
die
quo
Benedictus
papa
eius
nominis
sextus
decimus,
advocatis
beata
Maria
et
beato
Iohanne
Henrico,
huius
ecclesiae
quondam
Vicario,
Ordinariatum
ut
vocant
erexit.
Quem
vero
pontificem,
in
Anglia
peregrinantem,
hos
apices
somniantes
non
visitasse,
virum
doctissimum
a
doctis
non
esse
receptum,
virum
erga
Dei
Genetricem
tam
pium
in
hac
eiusdem
ecclesia
locum
orandi
non
invenisse,
virum
scriptis
beati
Iohannis
Henrici
inter
primos
eruditum,
eius
altare,
eius
ambonem,
non
vidisse
dico
aperte
admodum
doleo.
Fingite,
Academici,
pontificem
porticum
illam
appropinquare
per
quam
beatus
Iohannes
Henricus
hanc
aedem
precaturus
contionaturus
litaturus
saepe
ingressus
est;
porticum
dico
iuxta
mentem
archiepiscopi
illius
aedificatam
qui
nomine
suo
martyrii
sui
LAUDes
designavit,
cuius
porticus
locum
summum
rite
coronata
Deipara
Virgo
tenet.
Columnas
idem
papa
agnovisset
quales
salomoniacas
nuncupatas
Iohannes
Laurentius
circa
altare
clavigeri
discipuli
in
colle
Vaticano
eisdem
fere
annis
ponebat
quibus
hunc
imaginem
hanc
porticum
has
columnas,
pignora
duco
populi
Christiani
in
unitatem
coniuncti,
alma
Academia
Oxonii
erigendas
curavit.
Quae
vero
facta
sunt
in
aevo
cum
oecumenico
tum
Mariano
quo
tempore
Roma
et
Cantuaria
paene
inter
se
osculatae
sunt;
quo
aevo
Catholicae
Ecclesiae
gubernacula
summus
ille
pontifex
et
Urbanus
et
doctus
tenebat
cuius
auspiciis
vates
quidem
Polonicus,
vir
ipso
Flacco
minime
indignus,
Virginis
teretes
pedum
suras
non
humilem
lambere
Cynthiam
canere
non
dedignatus
est.
Quae
tamen
mentibus
profanioribus
hodie
non
placere
videntur.
En!
Produco
vobis
virum
Philosophiae
Naturalis
peritum
qui
thymiamata
foetida
corda
sacrata
suavitatem
insulsam
ineptias
denique
virginum
polystephon
ausus
est
clamitare.
Qualis
vir
et
quot
elegantiarum
refertus!
Non
sic
Iohannes
vester
Henricus,
qui,
ut
ipse
dixit,
cultum
verum
beatissimae
illi
Virgini
adhibuit
cuius
in
collegio
vitam
degit
cuius
arae
inserviebat
quam
iuvenis
in
concione
Immaculatam
confessus
est.
Cuius
vocem
argenteam
quae
ecclesiam
hanc
ab
adulescentibus
frequentari
effecit
illi
muri
penitus
hauserunt;
quae
vox
doctrinam
Ecclesiae
Anglicanae
ne
cum
decretis
Concilii
Tridentini
discreparet
subtiliter
illustravit.
Alii
quoque
hic
auditi
sunt:
Hebraicae
dico
linguae
professorem
illum
Regium,
Eirenici
auctorem,
quo
non
alius
eo
tempore
doctior,
qui
Sacram
Eucharistiam,
scriptis
patrum
ecclesiarum
Graecarum
perpensis,
tanta
claritate
tamque
mirifice
exposuit
ut
ab
onere
infra
Universitatem
per
biennium
praedicandi
iniquo
iudicio
semotus
sit.
Num
immemores
sumus
mathematici
theologi
pastoris,
Aedis
Christi
quondam
Canonici
et
Praelectoris
Bamptoniani,
qui
de
Catholica
veritate
et
Unitate
Christianorum
tam
occidentalium
quam
orientalium
indesinenter
scribere
solebat;
quales
viri
theologizantes
(ut
a
praesule
haud
ignoto
dictum
est)
infra
sonum
campanarum
ecclesiasticarum,
quamquam
in
Communione
Anglicana
mortui,
nihilominus
doctores
seiuncti
Ecclesiae
Catholicae
iuste
appellati
sunt.
Ideoque
et
nos,
tantam
habentes
impositam
nubem
testium,
Omnipotentem
deprecemur
pro
Ecclesia,
quam
pacificare
custodire
adunare
et
regere
sic
dignetur
ut
per
orbem
terrarum
Deo
Patri,
Filio,
et
Spiritui
Sancto
sit
gloria
et
magnificentia,
imperium
et
potestas,
et
nunc
et
in
omnia
saecula
saeculorum.
Amen.
ENGLISH
PARAPHRASE
What
a
long
list
of
names!
But
I
want
to
suggest
some
others
we
could
mention.
Today,
January
15,
is
exactly
one
year
since
the
occasion,
joyful
for
many
of
us,
when
Benedict
XVI
erected
an
Ordinariate
under
the
title
of
Our
Lady
of
Walsingham
and
Blessed
John
Henry
Newman.
A
shame,
dont
you
think,
that,
during
his
visit
to
England,
the
Pope
was
unable
to
visit
Oxford
to
receive
a
fitting
welcome
from
his
fellow
academics
and
as
a
man
with
a
great
devotion
to
our
Lady
to
say
a
prayer
in
this
church
of
hers.
A
leading
expert
on
Newman,
he
could
have
seen
Newmans
altar
and
pulpit.
Just
imagine
him,
walking
down
the
High
to
that
porch
through
which
Newman
so
often
entered
to
pray,
to
preach,
to
offer
the
Eucharistic
Sacrifice.
As
he
entered
this
church
through
the
porch
built
at
the
instigation
of
the
martyred
Archbishop
William
Laud
(whose
enemies
held
against
him
the
fact
that
it
contains
a
crowned
statue
of
our
Lady),
His
Holiness
would
have
been
made
to
feel
at
home
by
seeing
a
brace
of
twisty
baroque
pillars,
so
closely
similar
to
those
which
Bernini
contemporaneously
built
in
S
Peters,
Rome!
Lauds
and
Berninis
decade
was
one
marked
with
apparently
realistic
expectations
of
unity
between
Rome
and
Canterbury.
I
do
not
only
refer
to
those
exuberant
columns:
the
crowned
statue
of
Mary
reminds
us
that,
during
the
Barberini
papacy,
Laudian
Oxford
seemed
to
be
joining
Catholic
Europe
in
devotion
to
the
Mother
of
God
a
devotion
which
could
be
learnedly
and
divertingly
combined
with
a
humanistic
appreciation
of
Classical
literature.
One
of
Urban
VIIIs
associates,
Maciej
Kazimierz,
the
Christian
Horace,
was
emboldened
to
embody
the
triumphantly
Marian
Woman
of
Revelation
12:
1
(who
has
the
moon
under
her
feet),
within
the
metre
and
format
of
Odes
III:28,
and
brought
together,
in
seven
concise
words,
the
tragic
figure
of
Cleopatra
in
Odes
I:37
and
the
slave
girls
ankles
from
Odes
II:4!
All
this
is
not
perhaps
quite
in
the
style
of
a
modern
secular
university.
It
seems
a
far
cry
from
Richard
Dawkins
attack
upon
the
Catholic
Church
with
her
stench
of
incense
and
a
rain
of
tourist-kitsch
sacred
hearts
and
preposterously
crowned
virgins!
Indeed,
Newman
was
certainly
no
Dawkins;
he
looked
back
upon
his
years
as
Vicar
here
and
wrote
I
had
a
true
devotion
to
the
Blessed
Virgin
in
whose
college
I
lived,
whose
altar
I
served,
and
whose
immaculate
purity
I
had
in
one
of
my
earliest
printed
sermons
made
much
of.
The
walls
around
us
heard
Newmans
silver
voice
gathering
in
great
herds
of
young
men.
As
an
Anglican,
he
worked
for
unity
in
writings
such
as
Tract
90;
but
his
voice
was
not
the
only
one
to
do
this.
Edward
Bouverie
Pusey,
most
learned
man
of
his
age,
author
of
an
Eirenicon,
preached
a
University
sermon
on
the
Eucharist,
crammed
with
quotations
from
the
Greek
Fathers,
which
led
to
his
suspension,
for
two
years,
from
preaching
before
the
University!
A
Bampton
Lecturer,
Eric
Mascall,
mathematician
as
well
as
theologian,
defended
Catholic
truth
and
wrote
of
the
unity
of
the
Eastern
and
Western
Churches.
Such
men
exemplified
Archbishop
Michael
Ramseys
description
of
the
Anglican
theological
method
as
Divinity
done
within
the
sound
of
church
bells!
These
and
men
like
them
may
have
died
as
Anglicans,
but
they
are
such
as
Aidan
Nichols,
a
Roman
Catholic
theologian,
had
in
mind
when
he
coined
the
felicitous
phrase
separated
doctors
of
the
Catholic
Church.
Surrounded,
then,
by
so
great
a
crowd
of
witnesses,
let
us
ask
God
to
grant
his
Church
such
peace,
protection
and
unity,
that
throughout
the
world,
to
Father
Son
and
Holy
Spirit
there
may
be
ascribed
glory
and
praise,
sovereignty
and
power,
both
now,
and
world
without
end.
Amen.