Home/Stay Informed/All Diocesan Articles

All Diocesan Articles

What is the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter and Why is it Flourishing?

Posted on August 13, 2024 in: News

What is the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter and Why is it Flourishing?

Turn down “Shadyvilla,” an unassuming residential street in Houston, and you will be greeted by a surprising sight: an imposing white stone neo-Gothic church that wouldn’t be out of place in 14th-century England.

This is the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham, the beating heart of one of the most unique dioceses in the Catholic Church, the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter. 

Though in full communion with the Catholic Church, the ordinariate’s liturgical practice is deeply steeped in age-old English-Anglican traditions. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the ordinariate, however, is that despite the rapidly secularizing culture in the U.S., many of the ordinariate’s parishes, known for their reverent liturgies and respect for tradition, are flourishing.

According to several priests in the ordinariate, the diocese’s growth is primarily sparked by young people, especially young families. So, what’s going on and why are so many young people and families being drawn to the ordinariate?

 

What is the Anglican Catholic ordinariate?

When King Henry VIII broke with Rome and became the head of the Church of England in 1534, he ruptured centuries worth of religious tradition and practice developed between the English and the Latin Church.

Almost five centuries later, following growing requests from members of the Anglican Church, Pope Benedict XVI promulgated a document called Anglicanorum Coetibus that laid out a pathway for both individuals and congregations to be received into full communion with the Catholic Church. 

Two years later three ordinariates — the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter in the U.S. and Canada, the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham in the U.K., and the Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross in Oceania — were founded. 

Since then these ordinariates have offered former Anglicans, Episcopalians, and Methodists a pathway to enter communion with the Catholic Church while retaining much of their English patrimony.

Just over 10 years after its founding, the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter numbers 11,255 faithful, 81 priests, seven seminarians, and 36 parishes and communities in 15 states and three Canadian provinces.

The ordinariate’s growth has yet to slow down. There are currently 14 communities in formation and several new parishes were established just this past year. 

Presentation of the Lord Catholic Church in Montgomery, Texas, is one such community that after starting with 90 members in 2019 now has over 600 faithful attending Mass every Sunday. 

Because of this growth, Presentation of the Lord was elevated to the status of a parish in the ordinariate six months ago. The church building was formerly a simple barn in the woods of southeast Texas. Today, that barn has been beautified and consecrated, and is the spiritual home of hundreds of families.

 

Complimentary not competition

In an interview with CNA, Father Charles Hough, rector of Our Lady of Walsingham in Houston, explained that the ordinariate is not in competition with the rest of the Church but rather is meant to be complimentary. 

“This isn’t a competition by any means; it’s actually complementary to the mission of the Church,” he explained. “While we’re enriching, we’re also being enriched as well by those very faithful Catholics around us.”

Hough said the ordinariate exists to further the Catholic Church’s evangelizing mission to save souls and to simultaneously enrich and be enriched by the Church. He believes the ordinariate can deepen the faith life of anyone, even those who have been Catholic all their lives. 

While serving as an Episcopal priest in Dallas, Hough decided to convert to the Catholic Church in 2011. Through special provisions granted by the Vatican, he was able to be ordained a Catholic priest a year later.

By being allowed to retain many of the Church of England’s traditions, Hough said, the ordinariate reimbues over 500 years of liturgical practice including sacred liturgy, music, and art back into the Church.

While its core aspects are recognizable to any Latin-rite Catholic, the ordinariate’s liturgy uses the Book of Divine Worship, a missal approved by the Vatican in 2015 that draws from Anglican sources and has many Anglican particularities. In an ordinariate Mass, the priest faces the altar for most of the liturgy and the prayers are said in an older form of English — called “the king’s English” — which Hough said helps to further elevate the Mass as a sacred space set apart from ordinary, daily life.

Children in the ordinariate receive the sacrament of confirmation at a younger age than in most dioceses, often at the same time they receive holy Communion at the age of reason. 

Ordinariate members also participate in several unique traditions such as the observance of extra fasting days, called “ember days,” and the English tradition of choral evensong.

While partaking in these Anglican traditions, ordinariate members get to also experience the fullness of the heart and soul of the Christian faith that is in receiving the body, blood, soul, and divinity of Jesus Christ in the holy Eucharist.

“Allowing for those who have been enriched by an ordinariate patrimony,” Hough said, “what we have received from our fathers and been grafted back into the Church is something that is enriching to other people, even cradle Catholics.” 

 

Why are young families joining?

While many churches, Catholic and non-Catholic, have struggled to fill the pews since coming back from the COVID lockdowns, several ordinariate parishes, including parishes in Texas, Florida, and California, have been growing since the pandemic.

Father Albert Scharbach, pastor of Mount Calvary, a historic Episcopal parish in Baltimore that joined the ordinariate in 2012 and has been growing since the pandemic, told CNA that young families are the heart of this growth.

According to Scharbach, the median age at his parish is 12. When he speaks to these families, Scharbach said he has noticed a consistent answer for why they keep coming back to the parish.

“Families need to be fed spiritually, that’s the priority,” he said. “So, our primary focus here is to bring forward the roots of the faith with newness and vitality. That’s what families are after. It has to be alive; it’s got to be fresh, but it has to have roots.”

Christopher Pagel, a soon-to-be-ordained deacon in the ordinariate, told CNA that he has seen the ordinariate growing across southern California. 

After being raised Episcopalian and converting to Catholicism in the 1990s, Pagel said that he was “blown away” when he discovered the ordinariate. Since 2015 he and his wife, Ashley, and their now five children have been attending St. John Henry Newman, an ordinariate parish in Irvine, California. 

He attributes the ordinariate’s success to its emphasis on evangelization.  

“The principal mission of the ordinariate is evangelization,” he explained. “It’s sharing with people that might have grown up separated from the Catholic Church the fullness of the sacraments, saying, ‘Come take a look.’” 

“Everybody’s story about how they found the truth of the faith is so different,” he went on. “Yet there’s this common thread where then we’re in and we’re in our parishes and we are all committed to that evangelization and that growth.”

 

Sacraments and all-night barbeques

Luke and Paula Stuckey, a married couple with five children in Houston, backed up Scharbach’s hypothesis.

The Stuckeys have been attending the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham since 2020. While there are many reasons they chose to make the cathedral their spiritual home — such as the tradition, reverence, and community — Luke Stuckey was quick to say that the easy availability of the sacraments was crucial for him.

“The first thing that really made us fall in love with Walsingham was regular confession that was easy to get to,” he explained. “Every Saturday, every Sunday, and multiple times throughout the week.”

“In more than five years in attendance at another parish in town, I was never able to go to confession with a priest at my home parish because the schedule was that tight, even during Lent,” he said. “I think the priority at Walsingham focuses on the needs of the flock.”

It’s not just families; young adults of all stages of life are flocking to the ordinariate.

Alexis Kutarna, principal of Walsingham’s Cathedral High School, told CNA that young people are drawn in because of the ordinariate’s intentionality in making the Catholic faith a “concrete reality.”

“Young people are looking for meaning in their lives,” she said. “They’re seeking a true, meaningful relationship, and they are drawn in by those signs of that relationship with Christ.”

Reflecting the ordinariate’s values, Kutarna said the four pillars of education at Cathedral High are worship, wisdom, music, and art.

“These give us an approach to truth as a concrete person. We are encountering someone who’s really here, he’s not an idea,” she explained.

Kutarna said the ordinariate offers a community life that is rooted firmly in its relationship with Christ.

At Walsingham, this is expressed not just in the Mass and sacraments but also in more mundane ways, such as with its all-night Easter barbeque, which the cathedral holds annually after the vigil Mass. This year, more than 450 parishioners of all ages gathered for the party that went well into the morning.

Kutarna said there is “a sense of intentionality in community life” in the ordinariate that is not often found in today’s society. 

“It’s almost like a medieval English monastery or an English cathedral where you have an intellectual life that’s centered around the church, and you have an artistic life that develops around it, not only in architecture but in sacred art and sacred music,” she said. “This is all fostered in the local community around the church.”

 

United with the Church

Eduardo Brand, a 19-year-old rising sophomore at Mercer University and a lifelong parishioner at Walsingham, told CNA that the special gift the ordinariate brings to the wider Church is its emphasis on “the beauty of holiness.”

Pausing for a moment to reflect, he said: “Ultimately I think what this brings is this great feeling of connection to the faith.”

“I’m connected to all the parishioners here, to the parishioners who made this church what it is; I’m preparing myself to be the future of the parish and I feel the connection to Our Lady of Walsingham and her love, and to all the English martyrs and saints who built up this patrimony,” he explained. “I think it’s ultimately a feeling of really being united with the Church.”

By Peter Pinedo 

This article was originally submitted by Catholic News Agency on August 12, 2024.

 

 


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Ash Wednesday at the Cathedral: “Return to Me… It Is Not Too Late.”
The Diocese of Norwich entered the holy season of Lent with the celebration of Ash Wednesday Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Patrick, with the Most Reverend Richard F. Reidy as celebrant, concelebrated by Father Ted Tumicki and Father Brian Romanowski. In his homily, Bishop Reidy set the tone for Lent with words that were both direct and deeply hopeful. He began by drawing attention to the opening call of the prophet Joel—words the Church places on our lips at the start of the season: “Return to me.” Bishop Reidy reminded the faithful that those words ar...

Read More

Lifeboat: A Radical Reorientation for Catholic Survival
The Cathedral of St. Patrick’s in Norwich, CT is pleased to welcome Fr. Herald Joseph Brock, CFR (Franciscan Friars of the Renewal), for the 2026 Lenten Mission, on March 9–11, 2026, at 6:30 PM each evening. The Mission is open to all—please save the dates and help spread the word. A Lenten Mission is an invitation to “put out into the deep,” embrace deeper conversion, anchor ourselves more firmly in Christ, and rediscover our mission in Him. We look forward to gathering as a diocesan Church for these grace-filled evenings of clarity, e...

Read More

Bishop Reidy to Celebrate Mass for Life and Lead Bus Trip to Connecticut March for Life
All are invited to take part in a day of prayer and public witness at the Connecticut March for Life on Wednesday, March 18. Mass for Life The day will begin with a Mass for Life at 8:30 a.m. celebrated by Bishop Richard F. Reidy at the Cathedral of St. Patrick, 213 Broadway, Norwich. Cathedral students will be attending, and all parishioners are encouraged to join them in praying for the dignity of every human life, from conception to natural death. Bus Trip and Schedule Following Mass, participants will depart at 9:30 a.m. on a deluxe DATTCO motorcoach for Har...

Read More

Joyous Rite of Election Welcomes Catechumens and Candidates to the Diocese
Calling it a "cause for great joy," Bishop Richard F. Reidy welcomed 250 people on the road to becoming Catholic or completing their initiation during the Diocese of Norwich's annual Rite of Election.  The Rite of Election on Sunday, February 22, 2026, at the Cathedral of Saint Patrick was a watershed in several ways for the Diocese of Norwich. This year, the diocese welcomed 98 catechumens, along with 152 candidates, making for the highest combined total for the Diocese of Norwich in 10 years.  This is another step toward their journ...

Read More

God Offers New Possibilities, Not Prohibitions, With His Invitation to Love, Pope Says
Beginning with the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, humankind has had to face "the age-old dilemma: can I live my life to the fullest by saying 'yes' to God? Or, to be free and happy, must I free myself from Him?" Pope Leo XIV said during an early morning Mass celebrated in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Rome. ROME (CNS) -- While Satan tempts humanity with the lie of gaining unlimited power, God offers the gift of true freedom that leads to real love, relationships and fulfillment, Pope Leo XIV said. Beginning with the story...

Read More

 

 

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

 

Latest Articles
Palm Sunday Concert Planned at Cathedral of St. Patrick
Joyous Rite of Election Welcomes Catechumens and Candidates to the Diocese
There's Still Time to Secure Your Spot at Steubenville East, July 24-26
Resources to Help You on Your Lenten Journey
Laugh, Think, Cry, and Pray — Reconnecting with Faith This Lent
God Offers New Possibilities, Not Prohibitions, With His Invitation to Love, Pope Says
Praying the Way of the Cross Through New Eyes This Lent
A Beautiful Act Of Contrition
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: Adventure, Faith and Fellowship with Bishop Reidy
Click to view album: Ninety-Fifth Anniversary of the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Saint Brendan the Navigator Catholic Community
Click to view album: Episcopal Ordination of Bishop Richard F. Reidy
Click to view album: Students Called to Feed the Hungry
Signup for Weekly Newsletter


    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294