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Notes
on the Dedicated Life
Anglican Religious
by Dr Petà Dunstan
A few years ago, I gave a talk at my college in
Cambridge on the subject of Religious Life among Anglicans. It was to a
small group of interested academics and, at the end, we had a
question-and-answer session. The audience included a distinguished
American Roman Catholic nun, who was on sabbatical with us, and her
question took me by surprise: with there having been fewer vocations in
the past thirty years, did I think Anglican Religious Life would survive?
Without a moment’s hesitation, I found myself answering a confident yes.
Reflecting later on the exchange, I realized that this strong conviction
was connected to my historical perspective. For to me, the Church and
Religious Life are intimately connected. It is never the presence of
Religious Life which should surprise or need explanation but its absence.
The impulse to Religious Life is endemic among Christians. It is merely
the forms and expressions of it which differ in various historical
situations. I would contend that only particular expressions of the
vocation die out. The call itself is ever-present.
In looking at the Anglican Communion, this means therefore leaving behind
the idea that Religious Life "began" in the 1840s. It is true that the
Oxford Movement, from 1833, provided a theological perspective and dynamic
in the Church of England which gave many the confidence to found Religious
communities in its wake. These communities were a particular response to
the social and religious situation in which they found themselves. The
Religious wore the clothes appropriate to their time and developed
patterns of life conducive to success in their own era. (Those that did
not soon faded away.) Their work was heroic and the success of all they
did, particularly pioneering in health and education and social projects,
is seen in the fact that so much of what they did has now been taken over
by the state. Communities showed the need: society then responded. This
was prophetic work.
Ironically however, the very achievements of these communities meant that
they themselves would no longer be needed in the same specific form. The
fall in vocations in nursing and teaching orders from the First World War
onwards was a reflection of this. The decline was a sign of tasks
successfully completed. Yet, for those who associated Religious Life with
those particular jobs and institutions, and with the wearing of particular
habits, this decline was painfully interpreted as a decline in Religious
Life itself. Many have felt diminished and despairing as once-flourishing
orders have been reduced to a handful of members and some communities have
died altogether. Seen exclusively from the view of the past one hundred
and fifty years of the Church of England, the statistical decline might be
interpreted as marking the "end" of the movement.
Yet seen from a wider historical perspective, going back to the early
centuries of the Church, the rise and fall of specific communities and
specific works is part of the rhythmic cycle of Religious Life. The spark
is lit and burns brightly, only to die down in another generation, before
re-emerging, perhaps in a different form, in another time. Even the
Reformation, with its staunch and emotive propaganda against the vowed
life, did not destroy the possibility of Religious Life forever. There are
now monks and nuns in the churches which are the direct spiritual
descendants of Martin Luther.
For Anglican Religious Life, the passing of some communities founded in
the Victorian era is not therefore the end of a story. It should be
remembered that from the 1540s to the 1840s, when in the Church of England
vowed Religious seemed only a remote echo from the past, the values - and
sometimes corporate traditions - of Religious Life nevertheless survived
under many guises.
One example was within College chapels in Oxford and Cambridge, which
remained distinctly Benedictine in ethos and arrangement of worship.
Fellows of Colleges even had to resign if they married, a custom which
continued until the second half of the nineteenth century. Similarly, some
traditions of cathedrals remained intertwined with the patterns of
Religious Life. Amongst some families, the idea of community took hold,
most notably that of Nicholas Ferrar at Little Gidding, where the family
and household gathered daily to say the Office together. Yet again, there
were alms houses where all those admitted became "brothers" and wore a
distinctive "habit". Similar observations might be made regarding
hospices and the care of the sick, and also with respect to some
missionary movements. The Reformation had banished the communities - but
not the call to live out their values.
The explanation for this is simple. Religious Life is not an added extra
to the Church, but rather it is at its heart. For Religious Life is
nothing more nor less than the living out of Christian values - but in a
particular and intense form. The desire to seek God, to study the
scriptures, to practise Christian virtues through community life and to
serve the poor and needy in the world - these are all aims of the Christian
life. The vows and traditions of Religious are a means of pursuing these
goals from a position beyond the conflicting responsibilities that can
arise from wealth, marriage and children, and power. But the aim is
essentially the same seeking of God that is the heart of any Christian
witness. Religious Life, therefore, does not belong to any one
denomination or part of the Church, but is a resource, an impulse, a
potential for any faith community rooted in the Christian gospel.
The consequences of this perspective for Anglican communities are
important. First, they have a much longer and broader tradition to draw
upon than the patterns which inspired the pioneers of the 1840s revival.
The founders of the last century have much still to teach but they are
only a part of the riches available for Anglican Religious as they enter
the twenty-first century. The writings of the early monks and nuns and
their way of life are the inheritance of all Religious, whatever
denomination they belong to.
This is emphasised by the fact that in the past few decades, Anglican
Religious have finally been able to disassociate themselves from the
Victorian controversies over churchmanship, so bitter and divisive, of
which they were seen by many as a symbol. The days when monks and nuns
were seen as part of the partisan army of an Anglo-Catholic party fighting
for recognition are now gone. Some of today’s Religious are from
Evangelical church backgrounds, in which fifty years ago a conventional
Religious vocation would have been unthinkable. Equally, others come from
non-church-going families, for whom the old ecclesiastical battles have no
meaning in their own Christian journey.
Second, if Religious Life is a universal call then the ecumenical
implications are immense. For Religious, the opportunities for building
bridges between denominations are strong. The presence of Religious in the
Anglican Communion is in itself an ecumenical witness, to which the
Archbishop of Canterbury attested in his Foreword to the 1999 Year Book.
This is because, for many churches, the presence of Religious Life is a
sign of the depth of another church’s spirituality and way of life. The
late Father Pedro Arrupe, SJ drew out the full ecumenical implications of
this when he said that the vows of Religious transcended denomination.
They created a unity between Religious of different churches which was of
more significance than all that divided them. Religious can be a part of
what brings the Christian family together if this truth is fully
understood.
Finally, the historical view of Religious Life can only be a source of
confidence for all Religious, even those whose communities may seem frail.
For at many times in the long unfolding of the Church’s journey,
communities have suffered loss - and sometimes persecution - and yet their
values have survived. As one community fades away, another is born,
perhaps in a different part of the world. When First Order vocations are
down, Third Order numbers may be rising. One has only to think of the
pressures on the early monks and nuns, such as for the hermits of the
desert, or the women of Rome - in the face of ridicule - making their
homes into Religious houses, to understand the strength of the vocation.
Many Religious in the developing world face the same threats today of
war and upheaval, hostile governments and conflicts. In the West, dangers
such as secularisation, indifference to religion, and the lack of
commitment that can arise from an over-emphasised individualism are every
bit as threatening, even if in a different way. Yet, the values of
Religious Life are not destroyed. The need for them is instead made more
clear.
This is not to say that particular expressions of Religious Life will
all survive. An attachment to externals can be a problem for some
communities: a style of dress, a pattern of customs, a particular work, an
institution, or a set of buildings. All these may not survive, but their
disappearance would not signal the end of Religious Life. The Cluniac
Benedictines, a well-known order of the medieval period, died out and yet
their demise did not mean the end of the Benedictine witness. Similarly,
the seed of Religious Life proved so embedded among Anglicans that even
three hundred years of suppression could not eventually stop communities
being formed again, once conditions allowed.
That is why I had such confidence to answer in the affirmative when
asked the question with which I began this article. Even if sociology and
other academic disciplines are not always encouraging to Religious, the
witness of history has something different to say.
________________________________________
Dr Dunstan, is a Fellow of St
Edmund's College in the
University of Cambridge (UK)
From: Anglican Religious Communities Year Book 2000-2001
© Anglican Religious Communities 1999
www.orders.anglican.org/arcyb/
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