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By Karl Keating



This Rock
Volume 4, Number 10
  October  1993  

 Up Front
By Karl Keating
 Letters
 Dragnet
  CAN YOU STOUP (SIC) TO CONQUER?
By KARL KEATING
  THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN
By PATRICK MADRID
 Sidebar
Universal Negatives
By James Akin
 Sidebar
Material and Formal Sufficiency
By James Akin
 Classic Apologetics
My Conversion to the Catholic Faith
By Most Rev. Duane G. Hunt
 Fathers Know Best
Old Testament Canon
 Old Testament Guide
Job
By Antonio Fuentes
 Verse by Verse
 Quick Questions

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ALPHONSE de Valk, a Basilian priest from Canada, has written in a British publication that the decision of the Church of England to ordain women "ends once and for all, and for everybody to see, the Anglican claim to be Protestant yet Catholic, to be a continuation of the Church before 1534, to be a branch, together with the Catholics of Rome and the Orthodox of Constantinople, of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church." The problem is not so much women as priests, says Fr. de Valk, but the more basic problem of the "collapse of authority within the Anglican community."

While agreeing with him, I would phrase it somewhat differently: The women's ordination issue--another issue would have done as well--brought to the surface, for all but the willfully blind to see, that separation from Rome ultimately means separation not just from doctrinal, but from corporate stability.

For some years British Catholics, a small minority, have outnumbered Anglicans in the pews on Sunday. The Anglican numbers now will dwindle further. Some Anglicans will come over to Rome, and others will leave for churches that all along have called themselves Protestant.

It's a sad thing to witness, this auto-destruction of a church, but there's no stopping it. Once unity in doctrine and authority is broken, a collapse is inevitable, even if long in coming. We won't be able to read Lancelot Andrewes or Edward Pusey or T. S. Eliot in quite the same way any longer, now that we can see how the story will turn out.


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