St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Bridgeport, which will
joyfully celebrate its first anniversary Dec. 18 on the fourth Sunday of
Advent, is unique among Catholic parishes in the Philadelphia area.
It is not part of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, nor is it one of
the Eastern-rite Catholic churches in full communion with the Holy See
with parishes within the five-county area.
St. John’s is part of the Houston-based Personal Ordinariate of the
Chair of St. Peter within the Roman Catholic Church, which was
established in 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI.
It was one of three such
ordinariates established (the other two are in England and Australia) to
serve the spiritual needs of former members of the Anglican Communion,
including Episcopalians, who wish to the reunite with the Catholic
Church.
St. John the Baptist Parish was formed through the merger of two
smaller local congregations that broke away from the Episcopal Church
because of concerns about changes within their denomination: St. Michael
the Archangel, which worshiped in Philadelphia’s Mount Airy section and
Blessed John Henry Newman, which worshiped in Wayne.
Last year the St. John’s community arranged for a lease to purchase
the former Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, an Italian personal parish
in Bridgeport, which had merged into Sacred Heart Parish in nearby
Swedesburg in 2014.
Father David Ousley, the pastor of St. John the Baptist, expects
arrangements for the purchase will be finalized in the near future. His
congregation, which has about 100 members, is financially stable and he
expects further growth.
“Our primary focus is Catholicity for Anglicans who see a need for
it,” he said. “Usually they see a need for the sacraments or the need
for sound and concrete teaching.”
Father Ousley himself was ordained as an Episcopal priest in 1979,
but he and his wife Elizabeth and three children were received into the
Catholic Church along with some members of his former parish. He was
ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 2012.
At this point, Father Ousley estimates, there are about 75 priests in
the Ordinariate serving 43 congregations in the U.S. and Canada, and
there are 14 seminarians.
Most of the priests who were previously ordained in the Anglican
Communion are, like Father Ousley, married men, but any future
candidates for the priesthood must be single, as the rule of celibacy
will generally be observed.
Following the general practice in the Eastern Catholic Churches and Orthodox Churches, married priests may not become bishops.
The Mass at St. John the Baptist, as celebrated by Father Ousley, is
quite different from Masses most Catholics are accustomed to. At first
glance is may seem similar to a Tridentine Mass, for example the
celebrant faces East to the altar not to the congregation and there is
an altar rail separating the priest and the people.
Unlike the Tridentine Mass it is celebrated in English, not Latin.
With modifications, the Missal used for the liturgy descends from the
Anglican Missal adopted in England in 1549 during the short reign of
“the boy king,” Edward VI, the son of Henry XIII, a decade before the
Council of Trent concluded.
Because of its age, the liturgy reflects the grandeur of the
vernacular English of that era, and the Ordinariate has retained many of
the beloved hymns traditionally sung by Anglican and Episcopalian
congregations.
Music has always been valued in the Anglican Communion and at St.
John the Baptist, where the weekday low Masses may be complete in a half
hour or so. The Sunday liturgy, which is a sung Mass, which might take
an hour and a quarter. Technically it is not a high Mass because that
form also requires an ordained deacon and subdeacon (a lector at this
point).
Father Ousley does have two men in formation at this time and he expects at a future date there will be High Masses.
Who are the people who worship at St. John the Baptist? Most, like
Father Ousley, are former Episcopalians or Anglicans and their family
members. Others are converts and still others are Catholics who choose
to worship there, but cannot be formal members of the parish.
Wherever they come from and for whatever reason, they are part of the
one, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church and its rich diversity, in
this case receiving their spiritual sustenance through the Personal
Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter.