The Romish Doctrine
concerning Purgatory, Pardons, Worshipping and Adoration, as well of Images as
of Relics, and also Invocation of Saints, is a fond thing, vainly invented, and
grounded upon no warranty of Scripture, but rather repugnant to the Word of
God.
I just received my Weekly Anglican Update from
the American Anglican Council which included a video commentary on Article XXII
by the Rev. Canon Phil Ashey. Apparently Canon Ashey thinks that St. John
Vianney was a really great pastor but he
would never dream of asking the prayers of the Cure d’Ars. I cannot say for sure whether Canon Ashey actually
thinks he is speaking on behalf of all Anglicans for the benefit of those
outside Anglican circles or if he intends to correct a dangerous tendency among
some Anglicans. He certainly does not speak for me, or for my parish, in which
the saints are regularly invoked, or for many other Anglicans. . It was especially ironic that in the same
email was reported the news of ACNA meeting with the Russian Orthodox to open ecumenical
dialogue. The practice of invoking the
saints is rampant in Eastern Orthodoxy and there is not a Romanist among them.
To cite one of many examples in the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom and other
official Orthodox prayer books:
May Christ our true God who
rose from the dead, as a good, loving, and merciful God, have mercy upon us and
save us, through the intercessions of His most pure and holy Mother; the power
of the precious and life giving Cross; the protection of the honorable,
bodiless powers of heaven, the supplications of the honorable, glorious prophet
and forerunner John the Baptist; the holy, glorious and praiseworthy apostles;
the holy, glorious and triumphant martyrs; our holy and God-bearing Fathers (name of the church); the holy and
righteous ancestors Joachim and Anna; Saint (of the day) whose memory we commemorate today, and all the
saints.
To thee, the Champion
Leader, we thy servants dedicate a feast of victory and of thanksgiving as ones
rescued out of sufferings, O Theotokos; but as thou art one with might which is
invincible, from all dangers that can be do thou deliver us, that we may cry to
thee: Rejoice, thou Bride Unwedded!
Most glorious,
Ever-Virgin, Mother of Christ God, present our prayer to thy Son and our God,
that through thee He may save our souls.
All my hope I place in
thee, O Mother of God: keep me under thy protection. O Virgin Theotokos,
disdain not me a sinner, needing thy help and thy protection, and have mercy on
me, for my soul hath hoped in thee.
O good Mother of the
Good King, most pure and blessed Theotokos Mary, do thou pour out the mercy of
thy Son and our God upon my passionate soul, and by thine intercessions guide
me unto good works, that I may pass the remaining time of my life without
blemish, and attain paradise through thee, O Virgin Theotokos, who alone art
pure and blessed.
These
invocations would make the most ardent Ultramontanist blush.
I think the best thing you can do with the 39
Articles is ignore them or forget about them. I do not even think we have to
rely on Blessed John Henry Newman’s spin on the Articles. The fact is to take
the 39 Articles seriously is ultimately to say that no century counts except
the 16th century. It is to
set Anglicanism on an obstacle course with the all that came before it , the
Great Tradition of the undivided Church.
Indeed it is to oppose Holy Scripture. The statement that the Invocation
of the Saints is ‘repugnant to the Word of God’ is simply untrue. There is no
passage of Scripture which forbids or insists upon the invocation of the
saints. It might well be an inference, either for or against, based on the
interpretation of Scripture. But, as with so many other Reformation novelties
and like modern innovations, opposition rests on the claim that the Church had
it wrong until some more enlightened folks came along and set the rest of
Christendom straight. The question that needs to be answered ‘why the Church
before the Reformation never condemned the practice but in fact encouraged it’
is never answered. If the answer is the
Church was corrupt, then when did it become corrupt? In the 13th
Century or the 1st Century when the Church complied the Canon of
Holy Scripture?
The truth is that the Church never required the
invocation of the saints (at least in the West- it was otherwise in the East as
the examples above show). It was permitted and you could not speak against it. The
Church was reluctant to mess around with the prayers of ordinary Christians
unlike the Reformers of the 16th Century or the Modernists of the 20th
Century. Even in the Western Liturgy the invocation of the saints was a rarity.
The prayers of the liturgy did not say for the most part Saint N pray for us but rather asked God to answer the prayers of
the saints as in the Roman Canon (the Litany of the Saints at the Easter Vigil would be an example of direct invocation of the saints):
In
communion with those whose memory we venerate, especially the glorious
ever-Virgin Mary, Mother of our God and Lord, Jesus
Christ, and blessed Joseph, her Spouse, your blessed Apostles and Martyrs, Peter and Paul, Andrew, James, John, Thomas, James, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Simon and Jude: Linus, Cletus, Clement, Sixtus, Cornelius, Cyprian, Lawrence, Chrysogonus, John
and Paul, Cosmas and Damian) and all your Saints; we ask that through their merits and
prayers, in all things we may be defended by your protecting help. Through
Christ our Lord. Amen.
This is not the invocation or ‘ calling upon’
the saints; it is an invocation of the Father through the Son.
Canon Ashey says that he is willing to follow
the example of St. John Vianney but not willing to ask for his prayers. I do think
it wholly commendable to follow the example of the saints, even though in many
cases this is not possible. Is Canon Ashey willing to spend hours upon hours in
the confessional? I somehow doubt it. But if a line is crossed, when we move from
example to intercession, then the distinction between the two falls apart. I am
not arguing that asking the prayers of the saints is exactly the same as asking
the prayers of living Christians. It is not exactly the same. For one thing the
saints may well have more information than we do in this vale of tears. But
surely as an analogy we could ask ‘which request most clearly reflects the
sovereignty, power and uniqueness of God Almighty: when we say to our fellow
Christians ‘I want to be like you” or when we say ‘would you pray for me’?
Surely it the latter case which puts all the cards in the hands of God.
I cannot understand why we even have to think
about the 39 Articles at all unless it is because some Anglicans are nostalgic for the
days when the Articles were used to bash Roman Catholics and Anglo-Catholics
over the head. But some of us are also nostalgic for the teaching of the
undivided Church in all places and at all times and by all men.
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