Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2024
Towards the end of his many sided life Fr Vincent wrote “God knows how much I have striven and prayed to mend the shattered unity of Christendom”, words that may seem strange to those who only knew him in his later days, for he had developed other interests. But a study of his writing shows him to have been among the early Catholic ecumenists and to have kept up his interest throughout his life. His labours in this field span the formative years of the movement which is one of the glories of the Church in this century. Indeed it is plain that he not only laboured but suffered in the cause of Reunion -as it was known, and sometimes dreaded by many of his contemporaries.
In retrospect he traced his interest to lessons learnt at his mother’s knee, where he acquired “his first desire, never since quenched of seeking to love, even more than to convert, his separated brethren”. The uphill path he trod not only shows that ecumenism did not begin with Vatican II but how he dealt with problems that are still with us. While Prior at Woodchester, in the first years of the century, he was in correspondence with Anglicans on both sides of the Atlantic. He was host to his Cotswold neighbour, the Rev Spencer Jones, Rector of Moreton-in-Marsh, who became a leading Anglo-Catholic after the publication of his classic England and the Holy See. He was also writing in the early issues of The Lamp, a paper edited by Fr Paul Wattson, who after his reconciliation was to promote the Unity Octave through it for almost half a century.
1 This irenic note was to be struck once again in 1924 with heightened authority by Cardinal Bourne in his pastoral letter for Lent, which is often overlooked. It was written in the tense days of the Marines conversations “How little do the writers of such things realise what we feel with regard to the restoration of England to the Unity of Christendom ‐ how there is no sacrifice of place or position that we are not prepared to make in order to achieve that great end ‐ how there is not a Bishop among us who would not gladly resign his see and retire to complete obscurity if thereby England could again be Catholic”.
2 F.Valentine, Father Vincent McNabb O.P. p. 107.