Many years ago, when I was at seminary in London, we had several former Anglican ministers who had just become Catholics visiting for several days of a week to attend classes of various types before being ordained in their various dioceses to serve as priests of the Ordinariate of OL of Walsingham, a new structure that had been established by the Holy Father Benedict XVI, who was very fond of Cardinal John Henry Newman and sympathetic to the cause of groups of Anglicans who wished to become Catholics en masse, coming into the Church along with their clerics.
I was delighted with the whole idea of Anglicans being able to maintain their own customs and familiar ritual within the auspices of the Catholic Church, and I thought that Pope Benedict was being very kindly, very generous in a difficult position. I have got to know several Ordinariate priests since then, even in our own Diocese and they are wonderful. There are new possibilities now opening up for adaptation to other ecclesiastical communities, including the Lutherans and the Armenians. This seems to be an answer, although limited, to our repeated prayers for Christian unity. In this video below, Father Bradley explains in about twenty minutes what it's all about:
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