Through
these troublous times Bishop Ivins guided
the Confraternity wisely and well. After ten years
of service as Superior-General he resigned. The
Conference of 1946 accepted the resignation, with
deep regret, and elected as his successor the Bishop
of Northern Indiana, the Rt. Rev. Reginald Mallett.
At the risk of repetition it must be remarked again
how fortunate the American branch has been in having
Bishops-Associate, true Fathers in God, to lead
it in its work for the Confraternity and for the
Church. In Bishop Mallett it found a Superior-General
worthy of his great predecessors. No one can read
the records of the Confraternity without realizing
that these Bishops looked upon the office of Superior-General
not as a mere executive in an organization of the
Church, but as a pastor, commissioned to care for
his people, the Associates of the Confraternity.
For
them the annual meetings were not only legal requirements,
and practical necessities in getting its work done,
in the Council and Conference, but an opportunity
year by year for Associates to come together for
prayer and fellowship, in Eucharist and Agape.
As such, they are vital in the Confraternity’s
worship and life. In them the Superior’s
function is not merely to preside at a meeting,
but to offer the Holy Sacrifice with his people,
and to help them with true teaching and wise counsel.
In this service these four Bishops have been found
faithful during seventy years. Only twice since
he became Superior-General has Bishop Mallett been
absent from the annual meeting, and then unavoidably.
In 1948 he sent the Associates greeting and blessing
from Lambeth. In 1958 he wrote to them: "There
is still a tremendous work of prayer and instruction
to be carried on by our Confraternity. The best
way to do this is by our own faithfulness.
The
best way to recruit new Associates is by personal
contact with prospective members. Every opportunity
your officers have to speak of the CBS is to the
good, and I hope that during the coming month I
shall be able to devote more time to individuals
and parish groups." One means to this end
in recent years has been to hold the annual meetings
in places not visited before. Among these were
Baltimore, Utica, Denver, South Bend, Howe, and
Orange. South Bend and Howe, in Bishop Mallett’s
Diocese, Northern Indiana, and All Saints’,
Orange, New Jersey, is the parish of the Rev. William
R. Wetherell, who since 1952 has been Secretary-General.
Father Mitcham resigned in 3951. His immediate
successor was the Rev. Eric Pearson, who had been
Secretary-General of the Confraternity in England.
He served for one year, and was followed in office
by Father Wetherell. The Superior-General and the
Confraternity in this country were fortunate to
find a priest so eminently qualified to carry on
the work done by Father Mitcham.
The
same is true of the Rev. Grieg Taber, of the Church
of St. Mary the Virgin, New York, who in 1953 succeeded
Father Hooper as Treasurer-General. In Bishop Mallett,
Father Wetherell, and Father Taber the American
branch, this time has a trio of officers worthy
of the tradition of the Confraternity. This tradition
is best expressed in words with which Father Hooper
of the Church of the Holy Innocents, Hoboken, New
Jersey, resigned his office: "For eighteen
years I have been your Treasurer-General.… As
I have labored for the Confraternity, a society
dedicated to the honor of our Lord and our God,
I have viewed my efforts as a service of love and
devotion to Him." During the war these labors
had been heavy indeed, not only for the Treasurer
but for all the officers of the Confraternity.
Its work had been hindered by lack of funds. Now,
slowly, with peace came comparative prosperity.
This was due chiefly to an increase in the number
of life memberships and in the amount of the endowment
fund. Father Hooper and Father Mitcham had labored
for this during the lean years, and the Confraternity
now entered into their labors, and carried them
on.
One
of its good works has always been giving vestments
and vessels to priests in need of them. In recent
years it has been able to do this more generously,
not only throughout the Church in this country
but in other lands, including the Philippines,
Japan, New Guinea, Liberia, Brazil, and the Virgin
Islands. Bishop Mallett has been eager to extend
the Confraternity’s usefulness and influence,
and convinced that this may best be done by personal
contact. He and Father Wetherell have visited many
parishes, and made the Confraternity known to many
people hitherto ignorant of its history and purpose,
or unaware of its existence. With the same end
in view they have seen to it that at every General
Convention the Confraternity should be represented
by an exhibition and a service of witness. In this
sort of work they have realized the importance
and the advantage of co-operating with other organizations
working for the same cause. Notable among these
is the Guild of All Souls, a devotional society
only eleven years younger than the Confraternity
and associated with it in the loyalty and affection
of many Anglo-Catholics. For some years the two
societies in this country have celebrated together
an annual Mass of Requiem for the repose of the
souls of departed members.
In
the same spirit of co-operation the Confraternity
has helped the American Church Union in its work.
It had a part in the Catholic Congress held at
Chicago in 1954. With the Guild of All Souls it
maintained a booth throughout the sessions of the
Congress. On one morning, at the Church of Our
Saviour, the Confraternity sponsored a Solemn Pontifical
Mass at which Bishop Mallett was celebrant. Two
other Bishops-Associates were present: Bishop Brady,
of Fond du Lac, and Bishop Cooper, of Korea. The
records of the Confraternity describe the latter’s
speech at breakfast after Mass: "To hear him
tell so simply of the completely Catholic work
carried on throughout his diocese, and to hear
him speak so humbly of his three years' imprisonment
by the communists were thrilling experiences. The
Confraternity gave Bishop Cooper $50 toward his
work in Korea, and will send him several sets of
vestments to be used in devastated Catholic missions."
This
is only one of many ways in which the American
branch of the Confraternity has strengthened the
ties by which it is bound to the other branches
throughout the Anglican communion. At the Centenary
of the English Confraternity, celebrated in London,
in June, 1962, Father Wetherell was our representative,
and spoke on the Confraternity in this country.
At the Anglican Congress in Toronto, in August,
1963, Bishop Mallett preached at a service held
under the auspices of the Canadian branch. Meanwhile,
let us remind ourselves and our readers, the Associates
have continued in that quiet work of intercessory
prayer to which they are pledged. They have been
helped in this, under Bishop Mallett, by a revision
of the Intercession Papers distributed to Associates.
Down through the years, in this country as in England,
these papers had been monthly, with special intercessions
day by day. Father Mitcham had found flaws in this
system, and in some of its prayers. Other Associates,
not so patient as he, had demanded changes. Their
cry is heard from time to time, in minutes of meetings
long past. At last a committee is appointed, and
then another, but all report no progress. In the
Confraternity, as elsewhere in the Church, it is
not easy to change the devotional habits of a lifetime.
News
comes from England that the Intercession Paper
there is now quarterly, not monthly, and that the
change is successful. But there is still no change
here. More pleas are heard, from Philadelphia,
from Boston, from Dallas. At last the thing is
done. In this achievement Father Pearson is very
helpful, with his experience as Secretary-General
both in England and in America. At the annual meeting
in 1952 it is announced to Council and Conference
that "the monthly Intercession Paper has been
replaced with a quarterly Intercession Paper of
a type which will unite the prayers of our Associates
for those specific Objects for which the CBS exists." In
doing this the new paper eliminated the intercessions
all too personal, not to say trivial, which had
irked Father Mitcham and others of his generation
who still remember the old monthly paper. In the
new quarterly the intercessions are divided between
days of the week, and grouped under headings which
remind us of "those specific Objects for which
the CBS exists": Thanksgiving, Our Associates,
the Blessed Sacrament Reserved, the Observance
of the Fast, the Confraternity, Reparation for
All Dishonor, Eucharistic Worship. To these daily
intercessions have been added, later, suggestions
for weekly prayers and intentions at Mass.
Details
like these may seem only relies of bygone controversies,
not worth noting now. Rightly considered, however,
they still concern all Associates of the Confraternity,
and all interested in its history. One of its three
Objects, unchanged since its beginning, has been
intercession in union with the Eucharistic Sacrifice.
The changes in the Intercession Paper were made
to teach those using it the nature of such prayer,
and the history of the revision is proof of the
need of such teaching, not only for Associates
then but for many Catholics now. In making these
changes Bishop Mallett and his assistants were
mindful of the disciples’ cry, "Lord,
teach us to pray…" Such instruction
is an integral part of the work of the Confraternity
and of the Church. More recently they have borne
witness to another of the Confraternity’s
Objects by answering questions concerning the fast
before Holy Communion. These questions arose from
changes in the rules for fasting, among Anglicans
as well as Roman Catholics. At the annual meeting
in 1961 the Council adopted and the Conference
approved the following statement: "The Confraternity
of the Blessed Sacrament interprets ‘the
Catholic and primitive law of receiving Holy Communion
fasting’ (Object 3 of CBS) as meaning the
Traditional Fast of reverence, from all food and
drink from the previous midnight, the beginning
of the day. However, the Confraternity recognizes
that there are conditions of health that justify
a dispensation for an individual by proper authority
(one's pastor or confessor) from the strict Traditional
Fast.
The
Confraternity also recognizes that there may be
conditions in present day community and parish
life that justify a modified or shortened fast
before receiving Holy Communion. Such modifications
should always be regulated by a recognized ecclesiastical
authority, and be regarded as the exception and
not the norm. It is expected, however, that all
Associates of the Confraternity of the Blessed
Sacrament will make every possible effort to teach
and practice the Traditional Fast from all food
and drink from the midnight before receiving Holy
Communion. We shall also continue to pray that
all Churchmen will observe, when possible, this
same Traditional Fast as part of their preparation
for receiving Holy Communion." A statement
like this is part of the pastoral care exercised
by the Superior-General. Associates of the Confraternity,
like other communicants of the Church, are often
perplexed in mind and troubled in conscience. They
look to him as their Superior, and as a Bishop
of the Church, to speak with authority in answer
to their questions. They do not look in vain. He
answers not only for himself, but for the Council
and the Conference and the Confraternity. In so
doing he is fulfilling the purpose with which it
was founded a hundred years ago, and bearing witness
to the truth on which it still stands. Two questions
are often asked about the Confraternity as it approaches
its Centenary in America. The first is how it has
survived so long, persevering for a hundred years
in its work of prayer.
The
answer is that it has known what it was doing and
why it was doing it, never losing sight of its
great Object: the Honor due to the Person of our
Lord Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament of His
Body and Blood. The second question is whether
it will survive longer. Sometimes this question
takes the form of asking whether there is still
work for it to do. Unless we are granted the spirit
of prophecy we cannot predict the future of the
Confraternity. As to the need for it, this review
of its history in the past suggests an answer.
Let us ask ourselves whether, in the world and
in the Church to-day, more particularly in the
Anglican Communion and in the Episcopal Church,
due honor is now being given to our Lord in the
Blessed Sacrament. Until this object is attained
there is still need for work and prayer such as
the Confraternity has offered to God in his Church
during these hundred years. He has accepted it
and blessed it in the past. We may hope for the
future, and trust him to perfect it in his time
and in his way.
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