At head of title : Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission
"First published in this form 1975 SPCK, Holy Trinity Church, Marylebone Road, London NW1 4DU". -- inside front cover.
"'An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine' First published 1972. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Auxiliary Bishop of Northampton, 1971". -- verso of t.-p.
"'Ministry and Ordination' First published 1973. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, 1973". -- verso of t.-p.
"Printed in Great Britain by W. Hart and Son Ltd., (incorporating The Talbot Press), Saffron Walden". -- inside front cover.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents : An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine: Windsor 1971 -- Introduction / Henry Ossory i.e. McAdoo [and] Alan Elmham i.e. Clark, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- Ministry and Ordination: A Statement on the Doctrine of the Ministry: Canterbury 1973 -- Preface / H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory [and] Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- Appendix: The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission's Discussion of the Doctrine of the Ministry / Colin Davey -- Members of the Commission -- The Status of the Document (This note applies equally to the Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine).
Appendix by Colin Davey includes note "This appendix was written at the request of the Commission but carries only the authority of the Co-Chairmen and the writer". -- p. 20.
Colophon: Printed in Great Britain by W. Hart and Son Ltd., (incorporating The Talbot Press), Saffron Walden.
At head of title : Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission
"First published in this form 1975 SPCK, Holy Trinity Church, Marylebone Road, London NW1 4DU". -- inside front cover.
"'An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine' First published 1972. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Auxiliary Bishop of Northampton, 1971". -- verso of t.-p.
"'Ministry and Ordination' First published 1973. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, 1973". -- verso of t.-p.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents : An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine: Windsor 1971 -- Introduction / Henry Ossory i.e. McAdoo [and] Alan Elmham i.e. Clark, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- Ministry and Ordination: A Statement on the Doctrine of the Ministry: Canterbury 1973 -- Preface / H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory [and] Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- Appendix: The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission's Discussion of the Doctrine of the Ministry / Colin Davey -- Members of the Commission -- The Status of the Document (This note applies equally to the Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine).
Appendix by Colin Davey includes note "This appendix was written at the request of the Commission but carries only the authority of the Co-Chairmen and the writer". -- p. 20.
Colophon: Printed in Great Britain by W. Hart and Son Ltd., (incorporating The Talbot Press), Saffron Walden.
At head of title : Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents : An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine : Windsor, 1971, pp. 3-8 -- Ministry and Ordination : A Statement on the Doctrine of the Ministry : Canterbury, 1973, pp. [9]-31 -- The Status of the Document, p. 32.
Cover title: Agreed Statements on Eucharistic Doctrine and Ministry and Ordination with Elucidations.
At head of title : Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission
"American edition published by permission, 1980, by Forward Movement Publications". -- verso of t.-p.
"'An Agreed Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine' First published 1972 by SPCK. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Auxiliary Bishop of Northampton, 1971". -- verso of t.-p.
"'Ministry and Ordination' First published 1973 by SPCK. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin. Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, 1973". -- verso of t.-p.
"'Elucidations' First published 1979 by SPCK, London and Catholic Truth Society, London.. Copyright H.R. McAdoo, Archbishop of Dublin. Alan C. Clark, Bishop of East Anglia, 1979". -- verso of t.-p.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents : Introduction -- Eucharistic Doctrine -- Preface / Henry Ossory i.e. McAdoo [and] Alan Elmham i.e. Clark, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- Ministry and Ordination -- Preface / H.R. McAdoo, Bishop of Ossory [and] Alan C. Clark, Bishop of Elmham, Co-Chairmen -- The Statement -- The Elucidations -- I: Eucharistic Doctrine -- II: Ministry and Ordination -- Members of the Commission.
"With an Introduction and Commentary by the Right Rev. Alan C. Clark, D.D., Bishop of Elham and Auxiliary in Northampton, Roman Catholic Co-Chairman of the International Commission, Chairman of the National Ecumenical Commission of England and Wales."
"The Introduction, Commentary and Appendix Copyright Alan C, Clark, 1972". -- inside front cover.
"NOTE: The Statement is published as a separate booklet by the S.P.C.K. London". -- inside front cover.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: Acknowledgements [on inside front cover] -- Introduction to the Statement -- The Text of the Windsor Commentary -- Theological Commentary -- Appendix -- Statement of the Roman Catholic National Theological Commission.
Appendix contains two sections: (1) The Adoration of the Eucharist -- (2) The Reservation of the Blessed Sacrament.
It's called the Palazzo Doria, and it is indeed, as its name suggests, a Roman palace belonging to the Princess Doria Pamphilj.
You squeeze into a tiny elevator that holds four persons and you rise slowly to the top floor apartment of the Palazzo.
This is the Anglican Centre in Rome.
It's here, close to the Vatican, that the whole family of Anglican Churches throughout the world and the Roman Catholic Church are getting to know each other a little better.
The Centre is six years old. It was established during those heady days when Vatican II and the Ecumenical Movement were very much in the air.
If any additional stimulus was needed to establish a permanent Anglican Centre in Rome, it came when the second Vatican Council recognized the Anglican Communion as occupying a "special place" among those churches which, although not in communion with Rome, have preserved many Catholic traditions and institutions.
When the Archbishop of Canterbury opened the Centre in 1966, he predicted the Centre would be "a place where Christians of different traditions can meet and come to know one another."
In the view of the Canadian delegate to the Centre, Archbishop Ralph Dean, Metropolitan of British Columbia, the Centre has been quietly, but effectively, proving its worth and carrying out its mission.
"The two important parts of the Centre," Archbishop Dean said, "are the library and the chapel."
"The chapel is very small. I should think if you put 20 people in, that's as many as it will hold - but every time I have been there, and I go each year, and the Eucharist is celebrated in mid-day, there are always some Roman Catholic students there. They don't communicate, but they certainly are there. From the Gregorian, or the Pontifical or the English College or wherever. So that's a significant thing."
The Centre has proved popular as a research facility among students in training for the Roman Catholic priesthood - particularly students from Britain, Ireland, Canada and the United States.
The library now has 5,000 Anglican books. The goal is eventually to house 10,000 books representing the broad spectrum of Anglicanism from the sixteenth century to the present day in all parts of the world.
Another important aspect of the Centre's work is its involvement in lectures and seminars. Whenever a recognized authority on some aspect of Anglican Church work is in Rome, the Centre sponsors a lecture built around the visitor's specialty.
Director of the Centre is Dr. Harry Reynolds Smythe, an energetic Australian who speaks Italian fluently and keeps in close touch with the Vatican Secretariat for the Promotion of Christian Unity.
The ultimate goal of the Centre is best summed up by an anecdote which Archbishop Dean tells.
"Once a year, the Board of Directors of the Centre has a formal audience with the Pope. An address is read to him in Italian and he usually responds in English, although if he isn't feeling very well, it's in Italian with a little bit of English in the middle."
"He said something when I was there that I felt was extremely significant. I found out later he cribbed it from Cardinal Mercier, who lived in 1910, but in the middle of his Italian speech, he broke into English and said: 'Knowledge leads to love - and love to unity'."
"In early 2001, Her Majesty's Ambassador to the Holy See, Mark Pellew, approached [the editor] with the proposal that an exhibition (probably sited in the Vatican Museums) should be prepared alongside a two-day colloquium. The subject matter would be the history of the Church of England and of Anglicanism world-wide. Knowledge of Anglicanism in mainland Europe is fairly sparse and this would be an important educational exercise as well as contributing to progress in deepening Anglican-Roman Catholic relations. The suggestion was that the exhibition and colloquium might focus on an English cathedral as a case study and that the cathedral choir might also come to Rome to offer living music from the English cathedral choral tradition. Norwich Cathedral was a good starting point". -- Preface.
"The [nine] papers presented in the colloquium at the Gregorian University in Rome in June 2002, and the large body of recent work which these papers represent, offer a significant contribution to future Anglican-Catholic relations". -- Foreword, pp. viii-ix.
Contents: About the Contributors -- Foreword dated Holy Week 2003 / Rowan Cantuar i.e. Williams and Walter Kasper -- Preface dated Easter 2003 / Stephen Platten -- Anglicans and Roman Catholics : Ecumenism and History / Stephen Platten -- The Church of England 1533-1603 / Diarmaid MacCulloch -- The Shock of Change : Continuity and Discontinuity in the Elizabethan Church of England / Eamon Duffy -- The New English Church in One Family : William, Mildred and Robert Cecil / Pauline Croft -- The 'Anglican Moment' ? Richard Hooker and the Ideological Watershed of the 1590s / Peter Lake -- Suffering and Surviving : The Civil Wars, the Commonwealth and the Formation of 'Anglicanism', 1642-1660 / Judith Maltby -- Survivals or New Arrivals ? The Oxford Movement and the Nineteenth-Century Historical Construction of Anglicanism / Peter Nockles -- The Development of the Anglican Communion / William Jacob -- Rome, Canterbury and World-Wide Christianity : Hopes for the Future / Gerard Noel -- Appendix : Rome Exhibition -- Notes -- Index.
Appendix on Rome Exhibition contains: Remarks ... at the Opening of the Exhibition 'Anglicanism and the Western Christian Tradition : Continuity and Change' / Edmund [Cardinal] Szoka -- Opening Address / Walter Kasper -- Opening Speech [by] the Dean of Norwich / Stephen Platten.