Sunday, 5 September 2010

Fr Giles Pinnock and Family Becoming Catholic

I have had this news held privately in my heart for some time but I am most pleased now to be able to make it public along with Giles and his family. Fr Pinnock has been a good friend over the past year and a half and it is very good news to be able to give God thanks that the Catholic Church is soon to be receiving a faithful man along with his family into the Catholic family. Please give Fr Pinnock a welcome over at his blog or here and let us all continue to thank God for the courage of these men and their families when they make courageous decisions such as the one the Pinnock's have just made public. God bless Pinnock family, you are in our prayers! Welcome Home!!!!!!!

I met recently with the Bishop of Fulham to discuss the future relationship between myself, the Church of England and this parish. Following that discussion, I offered my resignation as the Vicar of St Mary-the-Virgin, Kenton, and Bishop John graciously accepted my resignation.

I have reached a point in my journey in the Faith at which I have become firmly and prayerfully convinced over a period of months that I should seek to be received into the full communion of the Catholic Church without further delay.

I have been the Vicar of St Mary’s for four years, during which time you have been a supportive and generous community to serve. The particular decision to leave this parish has been harder than the joyful decision to be received into the Catholic Church – although the two are of necessity connected, and as the Lord tells us in today’s Gospel, we must be willing to change fundamentally the context and the detail of our lives if we are truly to be His disciples. That call is always present to all of us, but can present itself more immediately at particular moments in life. This is such a moment for me and my family.

I realize that some of you may feel that I am leaving just as you most need to be led through the difficult times which Traditionalist parishes of the Church of England are to face over the next few years.

To those of you who will remain as committed members of the Church of England, I am on a path that is for now different from yours. I trust that one day, in God’s good time, our particular journeys may reconverge. In the meantime, I cannot provide the Anglican leadership you expect and so it would be wrong for me to remain as vicar of this parish.

To those of you who are considering becoming Catholics, either as members of the forthcoming Ordinariate under the provisions of Anglicanorum coetibus or in a local Catholic parish, I trust that I am, in the manner of a middle-eastern shepherd, walking ahead of the flock, leading you by my example to safe pasture.

I shall cease formally to be vicar of this parish on November 1st 2010. On that date, this parish will enter an interregnum, during which your churchwardens, Trish Royle and Ken Elliott, supported by the members of the Parochial Church Council, will be responsible for the administration of this parish until such time as a new vicar can be appointed. The Bishop Fulham, the Archdeacon of Northolt and the Area Dean of Harrow will also support Trish and Ken in their task, and I urge you to do everything you can as a congregation to support them too.

Fr John and Fr Malcolm and others will lead your worship and provide your pastoral care, and I ask you to support them gratefully as they do so, especially if from time to time during the interregnum it is necessary that the regular pattern of worship be varied.

I shall keep you in my prayers, and I ask you to keep me and my family in yours, both over the next few weeks and into the future.

Thank you.

4 comments:

Dorothy said...

From what I can recall after reading Fr Ker's biography of Cardinal Newman, the final years of his path to reception were punctuated by the reception of various of his friends who had reached that point before he himself was ready.

I think it is only to be expected that this beautiful path on which Catholic-hearted Anglicans are travelling, each at his or her own speed and with the destination more or less clear, will have somewhat ragged edges where this person, or that family, become aware that, for them, now is the time. "All manner of things shall be well."

May God bless Fr Pinnock and his family, and grant them many joys in the years to come.

Dolly said...

Welcome, Fr. Giles Pinnock and family to the Catholic Church. I trust that the tremendous pain caused by your decision to leave your previous religion, and the pains you may have caused some people, will be transformed to greater joy and blessings for everyone concerned. Thank you, too, for demonstrating to us courage to "leave all" when we hear God's calling us to a new path where greater risks are laid before us. I will pray for healing and for peace and understanding for the parishioners of St. Mary's.
God bless you and your family, Fr. Pinnock, your friends and parishioners at St. Mary church.

helgothjb said...

Not to be confuse with the very holy Fr. Giles Dimock, Prior of the OP house of studies in DC. The two of them should talk!

Matthew the Curmudgeon said...

Is Father Giles MUGSHOT the only photo available?

Many Years to Father G. and his family.