Father Alexander Lucie-Smith posts on his perspective of Evensong, that Book of Common Prayer amalgamation of Vespers and Compline in his blog on The Catholic Herald:
Yesterday I was in a cathedral city in the south of England, and having time to spare, and because it was raining, I decided to visit the cathedral and stay for Evensong. I am, like so many in this country, familiar with Evensong; I find it both beautiful and alien at the same time. I both love it and hate it. I only go to Evensong to listen to it, never to take part.
Evensong’s beauties are the work of Coverdale and Cranmer, two men who led the revolt against the unity of the Church, and overthrew the great work of time, the historic faith of this country. Cranmer’s liturgical reforms were not reforms in any true sense, they were a wrecking of the monastic offices and their replacement with something superficially like yet utterly alien. The Cranmerian Prayer Book provoked rebellions in England, let us remember. The West Country rebels of 1549 protested that they found the Cranmerian service that replaced the Mass no more than “a Christmas game” . The Northern Rebels who entered Durham in 1569 tore up the Prayer Book and had the Mass celebrated in the Cathedral once more. In 1596 one of my collateral ancestors, the Blessed George Errington, was hanged, drawn and quartered at York, along with three others martyrs, because of his Catholic faith, a faith he and many others simply could not recognise in the Cranmerian Prayer Book.
Thus the experience of Cranmerian English leaves me feeling conflicted. I love it and I hate it, and I feel I ought to love it, as it is so beautiful, and because it has inspired so many of our great poets, not least among whom is T.S. Eliot.
On our trip to London years ago, we slipped in the back door at St. Martin-in-the-Fields and found a pew box , wincing a bit when the boards creaked, to hear Choral Evensong, already in progress. One of the sopranos had that sure and steady, glittering voice that carrries over all the rest of the voices, and the performance was beautiful, but of course we did not stay for their Communion service, so we snuck out the way we snuck in. So far, so good, I agree with Father Lucie-Smith--it is beautiful but we were a little uneasy.
Then he goes to say that with the Ordinariate, the Catholic Church in England can reclaim Thomas Cranmer because the Ordinariate is preparing the Customary of Our Lady of Walsingham, "a daily prayer book for the Ordinariate - those former Anglicans who have recently become a distinct part of the Roman Church. In creating the Ordinariate, Pope Benedict recognised the treasures that Anglicans brought with them from their own tradition and this book is replete with the riches of Anglican patrimony. It contains material from the Anglican tradition, adapted according to the Roman rite including: * an order for morning, evening and night prayer throughout the year * an interim order of the Mass * spiritual readings for the Christian year * the minor offices * calendar and lectionary tables." Thus, Father Lucie-Smith says that the Ordinariate will "posthumously reCatholicise Cranmer and reclaim him for our tradition; it will make the Cranmerian liturgy, which I find a cause of division and conflict, into something that will bring about unity. It will mean that from now on, I need not find Evensong alien. Perhaps Dr Cranmer himself would approve. I hope so! It certainly promotes the healing of a cultural and religious wound."
I think this might be a step too far; we can't posthumously proclaim that Cranmer was a Catholic underneath it all, in spite of his rejection of the Sacrifice of the Mass, of the Real Presence in the Eucharist, etc, and all the other non-Catholic doctrines he developed in the Thirty-Nine/Forty-Two Articles of the Church of England. The Ordinariate is promoting healing in the Church by recognizing the goodness and beauty that was present in the Church of England all these hundreds of years past (and is), but it can't canonize Cranmer and ignore the real hurt and wounds--the martyrs, the persecution, procecution, fines, imprisonment, torture, and the destruction of an entire culture that Cranmer set in motion by supporting Henry VIII and Edward VI, placing the monarch in the first place, at least, as the Supreme Head and Governor of the Church. Cranmer has to be allowed his own free will (although a strict Calvinist would deny it!) and maintain his own version of integrity (although I have doubts about that!); we can't change him and claim him.
Stephanie--I'd be interested in hearing what made you uneasy at the service of Evensong you attended at St. Martin in the Fields. As far as I can see, there is nothing heretical in a service of Evensong, as it's not Eucharistic but an evening service marking the close of the day. Versicles and responses taken directly from the Catholic offices, psalms, hymns, canticles (again taken directly from Catholic offices), the Apostle's Creed, Kyries, the Lord's Prayer, more versicles and responses, collects, probably an anthem, and the blessing/grace, oh and maybe a sermon. Evensong in a cathedral, collegiate, or larger parish setting (like St. Martin's) may be very akin to attendance at Solemn High Mass in the extraordinary form however, as there is little vocal participation by the congregation except for the hymns. The choir sings most of it for you. I'm more concerned about what happened to vespers (and the other offices) after Vatican II. These reformed offices still maintain to be Catholic and that makes me uneasy. John
ReplyDeleteBecause we knew the history of the English Reformation (and we had snuck in the back door, after all). All that beauty based upon the monastic offices of the monasteries had been destroyed and the vocations that had been thwarted, made me uneasy indeed. And there was a Communion Service, so we had to leave again, as quietly as squeeking boards allowed.
ReplyDeleteThanks for explaining, so it wasn't the service that bothered you but the events surrounding how the service came to be? I guess I see the other side of the coin, that over 450 years after the break, even though there cannot be sharing of the Eucharist, Catholics and Anglicans can worship together at (Anglican) Evensong or (Catholic) Vespers without an issue. I think that is a cause to rejoice.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's why I agree with Fr. Lucie-Smith's comments about Evensong: "Evensong’s beauties are the work of Coverdale and Cranmer, two men who led the revolt against the unity of the Church, and overthrew the great work of time, the historic faith of this country. Cranmer’s liturgical reforms were not reforms in any true sense, they were a wrecking of the monastic offices and their replacement with something superficially like yet utterly alien."
ReplyDeleteI'm uneasy reading this post...... is it possible that in the pastoral desire to bring the fallen away back into mother church and allowing them to bring their ' treasure ' , is it possible that some Cranmer et.al. 'novelties' may be brought forward as well, due to their pseudo beauty , and be included and presented a generation from now as Catholic to the ill informed or more impressionable? Evensong and vespers are not the work of Cranmer but of generations of refined Latria ; it would be efficacious to have Bl.G. Errington comment to this ? i wonder what he'd say ?
ReplyDeletegedda fan, that's exactly what I'm bringing up in the last paragraph! I am uneasy too about Father Lucie-Smith saying that the Ordinariate can "recatholize Cranmer". As one of the recusant martyrs, perhaps Blessed George Errington would support part of my statement: "but it [the Ordinariate] can't canonize Cranmer and ignore the real hurt and wounds--the martyrs, the persecution, procecution, fines, imprisonment, torture, and the destruction of an entire culture that Cranmer set in motion by supporting Henry VIII and Edward VI, placing the monarch in the first place, at least, as the Supreme Head and Governor of the Church."
ReplyDelete