Catholic Mass In Anglicanism Cathedral Taps UK Vogue for Saints' Relics
Nearly 500 years after the English Reformation, a Catholic Mass will be celebrated at Canterbury Cathedral, Religion News Service reports.
By Catherine Pepinster/Religion News Service
LONDON (RNS) — King Henry VIII and his iconoclast-in-chief, Thomas Cromwell, would be stunned: Nearly 500 years after the English Reformation, Canterbury Cathedral, the mother church of the Protestant Church of England, will be given over to a Roman Catholic Mass, celebrated by the pope’s own representative in the country in honor of the martyr Thomas Becket, who died in the cathedral in 1170.
Not least among the historical oddities of the day will be that the Mass will award those in attendance a plenary indulgence.
When Henry broke with Rome in 1535 to create the Church of England, it led to the destruction of shrines to saints and martyrs, including their relics. The tradition of offering pilgrims an indulgence for visiting these shrines — a key driver of the Protestant revolt across Europe at the time — was ended.
But on Monday (July 7), Canterbury Cathedral will reverse that history when a Mass is celebrated by Archbishop Miguel Maury Buendia, apostolic nuncio to the United Kingdom, to mark one of the feasts of Becket, the former Archbishop of Canterbury murdered by knights acting for another English king, Henry II. After a repentant Henry II paid a public penance the following year, Becket was made a saint in 1173, and Canterbury quickly become a place of pilgrimage.
The feast, known as the translation of St. Thomas Becket, commemorates the moving of Becket’s relics from the cathedral crypt to the shrine behind the main altar, where they stayed until 1538 when, on the orders of Henry VIII who particularly wanted the cult of Becket suppressed, the crypt was destroyed.
Roman Catholic Masses have been held at the Anglican cathedral since, but this is the first time a papal nuncio will have celebrated Mass there. And while the only relics left at the cathedral are some bloodstains of Becket’s, the Roman Catholic parish of St. Thomas, also in Canterbury, has acquired a relic — a bone of Becket’s, which will be taken to the cathedral for the Mass.
As 2025 was designated a Holy Year, or Jubilee, by the late Pope Francis, Catholics are able to secure an indulgence — the remission of temporal punishment due to sin — for those who are truly repentant and meet certain conditions, including going to confession and Holy Communion, praying for the pope’s intentions and visiting a pilgrimage site….
Visiting Canterbury Cathedral to collect indulgences was the inspiration for Chaucer’s medieval comic masterpiece, “The Canterbury Tales,” which included mockery of the trade in indulgences, which at that time could be bought. The corruption surrounding this revenue stream was considered an insult to God’s name by such reformers as Martin Luther and Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury during the English Reformation, and did much to provoke the split with the papacy.
Now the focus of indulgences is on spiritual development, not paying your way into forgiveness and entry to heaven.
The July 7 event at Canterbury is evidence of a growing interest in shrines, saints and relics in the Church of England, often with the help of the Roman Catholic Church, which held on to relics rescued from the iconoclasts of the Reformation by recusant families and priests….
Read the full Religion News Service story.
The Church of England holds raves in Canterbury Cathedral, literally dancing on the graves of the Saints
The Catholic Church holds Mass in Canterbury Cathedral, marking the Feast of the Translation of the Relics of St Thomas Becket
They are not the same. Give it back to the Catholics.