Ealing Abbey

Last updated

Ealing Abbey
The Church and Abbey of Saint Benedict of Nursia
Saint Benedict's Church, Ealing Abbey (View from South - 01).jpg
The Abbey Church – front
Ealing London UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Ealing Abbey
Location with the Borough of Ealing
51°31′10″N0°18′31″W / 51.519477°N 0.308655°W / 51.519477; -0.308655
OS grid reference TQ1742781453
Location Ealing, London
CountryUnited Kingdom
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website ealingmonks.org.uk
History
FoundedMarch 1897 (1897-03)
Founder(s) Cardinal Herbert Vaughan
Dedication Saint Benedict of Nursia
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationGrade II
Designated19 January 1981
Architect(s) Frederick Walters [1] [2]
Style Perpendicular Gothic
Administration
Province Westminster
Archdiocese Westminster
Deanery Ealing
Clergy
Archbishop Most Rev. Vincent Nichols
Abbot Reverend Dominic Taylor O.S.B.

The Abbey of Ealing is a Roman Catholic Benedictine monastery located on Castlebar Hill in Ealing, United Kingdom. It is part of the English Benedictine Congregation.

Contents

The shrine is dedicated to Saint Benedict of Nursia. In 2020, the Abbey had fourteen residential monks. [3]

History

The monastery at Ealing was founded in 1897 from Downside Abbey, originally as a parish in the Archdiocese of Westminster. It was canonically erected as a dependent priory in 1916 and raised again to the rank of independent conventual priory in 1947.

Pope Pius XII raised the building to the status of an abbey in 1955.

The building

The architect of the Abbey Church, a Grade II Listed building, was F A Walters. Two or three bays in the nave were open by 1899 and part of the monastery in use by 1905. By 1915 the sanctuary and Lady Chapel together with more bays were completed. The west end together with the four western bays were completed by 1934 by Edward John Walters, the son of F A Walters. [4]

Nave of the Church of Saint Benedict, part of the abbey Nave of Saint Benedict's Church, Ealing Abbey (Northwest Facing View - 02).jpg
Nave of the Church of Saint Benedict, part of the abbey

Two bombs damaged the church in 1940. The first destroyed the organ chamber and the War Memorial Chapel. The second destroyed the east end, including the sanctuary and choir. Only two stained glass windows survived, although damaged. [5]

Restoration of war damage was started in 1957 and completed by 1962. The church was enlarged and the transepts completed by Stanley Kerr Bate. The Monks Choir beyond the crossing and Lady Chapel were added in 1996-98 to the designs of Sir William Whitfield.

The single hammerbeam nave roof has a painted decoration, with the monograms IHC and SB (for St Benedict).

The large west window, depicting the Coronation of the Virgin attended by the heavenly host, is by Burlison and Grylls. [4] The window in the south transept, a memorial to victims of two world wars, is by Ninian Comper and William Bucknall (c.1960). It depicts a beardless Risen Christ and Saints David, George, Andrew and Patrick.

There is a painting of Peter's Denial of Christ by Jusepe de Ribera.

Apostolate

Parish

One of the main apostolates of the Abbey is running a major parish in Ealing centred on the Abbey Church of Saint Benedict where both the parish and monastic liturgies take place.

Music

Ealing Abbey Choir of boys' and men's voices sings at the Sunday Conventual Mass. The choir appeared in the BBC television programme Songs of Praise in 2005.

The Abbey has an active programme of music recitals, which include the choirs and the organ. [6] Occasional concerts by other choirs are also held. [7]

The Lay Plainchant Choir gives lay people the opportunity to practise and sing chant. The choir provides opportunities for workshops and training. The choir has weekly rehearsals and sings monthly at a Sunday Mass. Those members available also sing periodically at a local care home for elderly people suffering from dementia. [8]

Hospitality

The monks of Ealing accept clerical and lay men as guests in the monastery, on the understanding that guests will attend morning mass and evening vespers with the monks. Residential and non residential guests are welcome at the sung liturgy of the hours in the Abbey Church and the monks have a house for guests and retreatants.

School

A major work of the Abbey in the past has been teaching and administration in St Benedict's School, founded as Ealing Priory School in 1902 by Sebastian Cave. [4] This is an independent day school for boys and, since 2007, girls at both the junior and senior levels. There is also a small co-educational nursery. Since 1987 the Abbey has engaged a lay headmaster for the school having previously provided the headmaster from foundation. In 2012 the trust of St Benedict, Ealing created a new charitable trust, St Benedict's School, and passed school administration to a new board of governors. As a result, members of the monastic community are more free to choose different apostolates. The Abbey also has close links with the nearby girls' school St Augustine's Priory, a former convent school.

Sex abuse scandal

In April 2006, civil damages were awarded jointly against David Pearce, a former head of the junior school at St Benedicts, and Ealing Abbey in the High Court in relation to an alleged assault by Pearce on a pupil while teaching at St Benedict's School in the 1990s, although criminal charges were dropped. [9] Pearce was charged in November 2008 with 24 counts of indecent assault, sexual touching and gross indecency with six boys aged under 16, relating to incidents before and after 2003, the date when a new offence of sexual touching was created. [10] [11] Pleading guilty at Isleworth Crown Court to offences going back to 1972, Pearce was jailed for eight years in October 2009, subsequently reduced to five years, for sexual abuse offences at the school from 1972 to 1992 and for one offence in 2007 after he had ceased to work in the school. [12] [13]

The conduct of the Ealing monastic community, as trustee of the St. Benedict's Trust, was examined by the Charity Commission, which found it had failed to take adequate measures to protect beneficiaries of the charity from Pearce. [14] [15]

In March 2011, Dom Laurence Soper, a former Abbot of Ealing Abbey, [16] was arrested on child abuse charges relating to the period when he was a teacher at, and the bursar of, St Benedict's School. [17] In 2016, he was arrested in Kosovo and extradited to the UK to face trial. [18] In December 2017, following a 10-week trial, Soper was found guilty on 19 counts of child sexual abuse including buggery, indecency with a child and indecent assault. [19] He was sentenced to 18 years imprisonment. [20]

Following these incidents and other alleged offences, Abbot Shiperlee commissioned a report from Lord Carlile of Berriew with a view to making recommendations on the School's governance. [21] As a result of the changes made the Independent Schools Inspectorate said in its 2013 inspection report that the pastoral care at St Benedict's was excellent. [22]

In 2018-2019, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) was investigating institutional failures to protect children from sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in England and Wales, including complaints about Catholic schools and specifically investigations at Ealing Abbey and St Benedict's school. The Pope's representative in Britain, archbishop Edward Adams, refused to co-operate with the enquiry. [23]

In February 2019, Martin Shipperlee, abbot of Ealing Abbey, resigned over a failure to investigate child sexual abuse allegations. [24]

Benedictine Study and Arts Centre, renamed Benedictine Institute

The monks of Ealing also run the Benedictine Institute, which was originally suggested in 1986 by Francis Rossiter, the Abbot, and opened in 1992 by Laurence Soper, then Abbot. The present Abbot, Martin Shipperlee, has continued his support since his election in 2000. The Institute, which is endorsed and supported by the Archdiocese of Westminster, has developed and provides a Liberal Arts programme of adult education and a programme of Sacred Liturgy, with some officially validated courses. The studies pursued now focus upon Sacred Liturgy and the Liberal Arts, including theology [25] (go to directory of institutions) and both modern and classical languages, of which the Latin summer school has become a regular feature of the annual programme.

The Benedictine Institute, an umbrella for The Liturgy Institute of England and Wales (Institutum Liturgicum), [26] St Bede Library, Ealing Abbey Pottery and London Spring are housed in Overton House, a Victorian mansion property in Castlebar Road adjacent to the Abbey built by John M. Bartholomew[ citation needed ], son of the founder of John Bartholomew and Son, the map-maker and publisher of atlases; the name of "J.M. Bartholomew" features in some carved stones in the walls of the garden. The property was purchased by Downside Abbey in 1930 and sold to Ealing Abbey upon its independence from Downside in 1955.[ citation needed ]

The St Bede library contains three main collections for undergraduate liberal studies and graduate study in theology and liturgy, based on a collection assembled in Oxford, London and Rome from 1978 to 1992. These were subsequently supplemented by purchase and gift, in particular by donations from members of the Alcuin Club. [27]

From 2002 until his retirement in 2015 the Institute's principal and head of Liturgy, James Leachman, served as professor and later as tenured professor of Liturgy at the Pontifical Institute of Liturgy at Sant Anselmo in Rome. Throughout this period he directed the Institute's work; since 2010 Fr Daniel McCarthy OSB has shared much of the teaching and administration of the Liturgical Institute. [28] The UK arm of the project, Appreciating the Liturgy (based on the encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia), [29] founded and directed by James Leachman and Daniel McCarthy, a monk of St. Benedict's Abbey in Atchison, Kansas, has been housed since 2009 in the former "Scriptorum" at the Centre, originally established by Bernard Orchard in 2003. [30]

The Centre publishes the periodical Benedictine Culture twice each year. [31]

Monks of Ealing

Ealing Abbey was the home for parts of their careers of various notable monks.

Bernard Orchard, the biblical scholar, was a distinguished monk of Ealing. [32]

Between 1933 and 1939, David Knowles, the monastic historian and later Regius Professor of Modern History at the University of Cambridge resided there and conducted the research for his magnum opus The Monastic Order in England. [33]

Cuthbert Butler also lived at Ealing following his retirement as Abbot of Downside from 1922 until his death in 1934. [34] John Main, a proponent of Christian meditation, whose methods are now fostered by the World Community for Christian Meditation, was a monk of the Ealing community in the period 1959–1970 and 1974–1977. [35]

In September 2011, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith ordered an apostolic visitation of Ealing Abbey. The Abbey's safeguarding policies and procedures formed part of the remit of the visitors. [36]

Priors and Abbots

The following monks have served as Prior and, since elevation to the status of Abbey on 26 May 1955, Abbot: [37]

TenureOfficeIncumbentNotes
1916 to 1925PriorWulstan PearsonConsecrated as the first Catholic Bishop of Lancaster, 25 February 1925
1925 to 1935PriorBenedict Kuypers
1935 to 1938PriorEdward GreenHeadmaster of Ealing Priory School 1917–1919
1938PriorMark Pontifex
1938 to 1945PriorStanislaus Chatterton
1945 to 1946PriorAmbrose AgiusMember of Ealing Community at independence from Downside, December 1947
1946 to 1955PriorCharles PontifexMember of Ealing Community at independence from Downside, December 1947; appointed as the first Abbot
1955 to 1956AbbotCharles PontifexResigned following a car crash; died 1976
1956 to 1967AbbotRupert HallHeadmaster of Ealing Priory School 1939–1945; member of Ealing Community at independence from Downside, December 1947; died 1974
1967 to 1991AbbotFrancis Rossiter
1991 to 2000AbbotLaurence SoperArrested in 2011 on child abuse charges [17] and subsequently imprisoned.
2000 to 2019AbbotMartin ShipperleeResigned over a failure to investigate child sexual abuse allegations [38]
2019AbbotDominic Taylor

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Benedictines</span> Catholic monastic order

The Benedictines, officially the Order of Saint Benedict, are a mainly contemplative monastic religious order of the Catholic Church for men and for women who follow the Rule of Saint Benedict. The male religious are also sometimes called the Black Monks, in reference to the colour of their religious habits, in contrast to other Benedictine orders such as the Olivetans, who wear white. They were founded in 529 by Benedict of Nursia, a 6th-century Italian monk who laid the foundations of Benedictine monasticism through the formulation of his Rule. Benedict's sister, Scholastica, possibly his twin, also became a religious from an early age, but chose to live as a hermit. They retained a close relationship until her death.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Buckfast Abbey</span> Church in Devon, England

Buckfast Abbey forms part of an active Benedictine monastery at Buckfast, near Buckfastleigh, Devon, England. Buckfast first became home to an abbey in 1018. The first Benedictine abbey was followed by a Savignac, later Cistercian, abbey constructed on the site of the current abbey in 1134. The monastery was surrendered for dissolution in 1539, with the monastic buildings stripped and left as ruins, before being demolished. The former abbey site was used as a quarry, and later became home to a Gothic mansion house.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Norcia, Western Australia</span> Town in Western Australia

New Norcia is a town in Western Australia, 132 km (82 mi) north of Perth, near the Great Northern Highway. It is situated next to the banks of the Moore River, in the Shire of Victoria Plains. New Norcia is the only monastic town in Australia, with its Benedictine abbey founded in 1848. The monks later founded a mission and schools for Aboriginal children. A series of Catholic colleges were created, with the school that became St Benedict's College in 1965 later gaining notoriety for being the site of sexual abuse that took place in the late 1960s and 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Downside Abbey</span> Benedictine monastery in Somerset, England

Downside Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in England and the senior community of the English Benedictine Congregation. Until 2019, the community had close links with Downside School, for the education of children aged eleven to eighteen. Both the abbey and the school are at Stratton-on-the-Fosse, between Westfield and Shepton Mallet in Somerset, South West England. In 2020, the monastic community announced that it would move away from the present monastery and seek a new place to live. In October 2021, the monastic community further announced that as part of their transition they would move in Spring of 2022 to the temporary accommodation of "Southgate House, in the grounds of Buckfast Abbey, Devon, where we will live as the Community of St Gregory the Great". As of 2020, the monastic community of Downside Abbey was home to fifteen monks.

Downside School is a co-educational Catholic independent boarding and day school in the English public school tradition for pupils aged 11 to 18. It is located between Bath, Frome, Wells and Bruton, and is attached to Downside Abbey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Worth Abbey</span>

The Abbey of Our Lady, Help of Christians, commonly known as Worth Abbey, is a community of Roman Catholic monks who follow the Rule of St Benedict near Turners Hill village, in West Sussex, England. Founded in 1933, the abbey is part of the English Benedictine Congregation. As of 2020, the monastic community had 21 monks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">English Benedictine Congregation</span>

The English Benedictine Congregation (EBC) unites autonomous Roman Catholic Benedictine communities of monks and nuns and is technically the oldest of the nineteen congregations that are affiliated in the Benedictine Confederation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Subiaco Abbey (Arkansas)</span> United States historic place

Subiaco Abbey is an American Benedictine monastery located in the Arkansas River valley of Logan County, Arkansas, part of the Swiss-American Congregation of Benedictine monasteries. It is home to thirty-nine Benedictine monks. The abbey and the preparatory school it operates, Subiaco Academy, are major features of the town of Subiaco, Arkansas. It is named after the original Subiaco, Italy, where the first monastery founded by Saint Benedict was located.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint Anselm's Abbey (Washington, D.C.)</span> Benedictine monastery in Washington, D.C.

St. Anselm's Abbey is a Benedictine Abbey located at 4501 South Dakota Avenue, N.E., in Washington, D.C. It operates the boys' middle and high school St. Anselm's Abbey School, which was ranked by the Washington Post as the most challenging in Washington, D.C., and as the most challenging private high school in the U.S.

St Benedict's School, usually referred to as St Benedict's, is a British co-educational independent Roman Catholic day school situated in Ealing, West London. A Benedictine Roman Catholic school, it accepts and educates pupils of all faiths.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Conception Abbey</span> Benedictine monastery in Conception, Missouri

Conception Abbey, site of the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, is a monastery of the Swiss-American Congregation of the Benedictine Confederation. The monastery, founded by the Swiss Engelberg Abbey in 1873 in northwest Missouri's Nodaway County, was raised to a conventual priory in 1876 and elevated to an abbey in 1881. In 2021 the community numbered fifty-eight monks who celebrate the Eucharist and Liturgy of the Hours daily and who staff and administer Conception Seminary College, The Printery House, and the Abbey Guest Center. Monks also serve as parish priests and hospital chaplains in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-Saint Joseph and other dioceses. There is also a large postal facility attached to The Printery House, operated by lay employees, which includes package shipping and delivery facilities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Solesmes Abbey</span> Abbey located in Sarthe, in France

Solesmes Abbey or St. Peter's Abbey, Solesmes is a Benedictine monastery in Solesmes, Sarthe, France, famous as the source of the restoration of Benedictine monastic life in the country under Dom Prosper Guéranger after the French Revolution. The current abbot is the Right Reverend Dom Abbot Geoffrey Kemlin, O.S.B., elected in 2022.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fort Augustus Abbey</span> Former Benedictine monastery in Scotland

Fort Augustus Abbey, properly St. Benedict's Abbey, at Fort Augustus, Inverness-shire, Scotland, was a Benedictine monastery, from late in the nineteenth century to 1998 that also housed a school for boys until 1993.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ampleforth Abbey</span> Church in North Yorkshire, England

Ampleforth Abbey is a monastery of Benedictine monks a mile to the east of Ampleforth, North Yorkshire, England, part of the English Benedictine Congregation. It descends from the pre-Reformation community at Westminster Abbey through the last surviving monk from Westminster, Sigebert Buckley. As of 2023 the monastery has 46 monks, and sometimes will have 50 nuns of the monastery organization.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Belmont Abbey, Herefordshire</span> Church in Herefordshire, United Kingdom

Belmont Abbey, in Herefordshire, England, is a Catholic Benedictine monastery that forms part of the English Benedictine Congregation. It stands on a small hill overlooking the city of Hereford to the east, with views across to the Black Mountains in Wales to the west. The 19th century Abbey also serves as a parish church.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christopher Jamison</span>

Christopher Jamison, O.S.B. is a Benedictine monk and former Abbot of Worth Abbey in West Sussex, England. He currently serves as the Abbot President of the English Benedictine Congregation.

The sexual abuse scandal in the English Benedictine Congregation was a significant episode in the series of Catholic sex abuse cases in the United Kingdom. The dates of the events covered here range from the 1960s to the 2010s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silverstream Priory</span>

Silverstream Priory is a Roman Catholic monastery in Stamullen, County Meath, Ireland, founded in 2012. The monastery is an autonomous diocesan priory of the Benedictine Monks of Perpetual Adoration.

The Abbey of St. Maurus is a Tanzanian Benedictine monastery of the Congregation of Missionary Benedictines of Saint Ottilien in Hanga, Ruvuma Region. Established in 1956 by Abbot-Bishop Eberhard Spiess as a formation house for African monastic candidates, the monastery is currently home to 122 monks. The abbey operates schools and a dispensary for the people of the local village and a seminary for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Songea.

Dominic Terence Joseph Bellenger,, also known by his monastic name of Dom Aidan Bellenger, is an English historian and former Benedictine monk and schoolmaster. He was headmaster of Downside School from 1991 to 1995 and later Abbot of Downside Abbey from 2006 to 2014.

References

Notes

  1. Kollar 1989, p. 53
  2. Kollar 1989, p. 126
  3. The Benedictine Yearbook. London: English Benedictine Congregation Trust. 2020. p. 26. ISBN   978-0-901089-58-8.
  4. 1 2 3 "Ealing - Abbey Church of St Benedict". Taking Stock. Archived from the original on 1 January 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  5. "Abbey Church history". Ealing Abbey. 21 November 2013.
  6. "Ealing Abbey Music". ealingmonks.org.uk. 21 May 2013. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  7. "The Sixteen's 2013 Choral Pilrimage – The Queen of Heaven". bbc.co.uk. 22 October 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  8. Ealing Abbey Lay Plainchant choir
  9. Alleged Assault Ealing Times 13 April 2006
  10. Priest charged with paedophilia Ealing Gazette 9 December 2008
  11. Ealing priest charged Ealing Times 9 December 2008
  12. 'Devil in a dog collar' priest faces jail for sex abuse Archived 9 December 2012 at archive.today London Evening Standard – 12 August 2009
  13. Jailed child pervert priest ruined my life Ealing Gazette, 9 October 2009 Archived October 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  14. Charity Commission Report on St. Benedict's Trust, 15 December 2009
  15. Constituency Matters: Protect children but don't abandon civil liberties Ealing Gazette 21 December 2009
  16. The Guardian, 24 October 2019 child abuse st benedicts school
  17. 1 2 Father Laurence Soper of Ealing wanted over sex abuse BBC News 14 October 2011
  18. "Kosovo sends accused ex-priest Lawrence Soper back to UK". BBC News. 22 August 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  19. Bowcott, Owen (6 December 2017). "London priest who fled to Kosovo found guilty of abusing schoolboys". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
  20. Sherwood, Harriet (21 December 2017). "Priest who sexually abused boys at London school jailed for 18 years". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
  21. "Carlile Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  22. "St Benedict's School 2013 Inspection Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  23. "Inquiry to hold public hearing on Ealing Abbey and St Benedict's School". IICSA. 23 January 2019.
  24. Bowcott, Owen (8 February 2019). "Ealing Abbey abbot resigns over failure to investigate child abuse allegations". Guardian.
  25. "Distance learning and flexible study – University of London International Programmes".
  26. https://liturgyinstitute.org.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  27. Benedictine Culture (ISSN 1751-4673) 2010
  28. "Pontifical Institute of Liturgy website".[ permanent dead link ]
  29. "Appreciating the Liturgy". Archived from the original on 4 July 2010. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  30. referenced in two books * Born to be King – The Epic of the Incarnation (A theological application of the Matthean Priority Hypothesis), Ealing Abbey Scriptorium, London (1993); * The Origin and Evolution of the Gospels, Ealing Abbey Scriptorium, London 1993
  31. "Benedictine and Monastic Academic Periodicals and Serials. Catalog. OSB". Archived from the original on 19 April 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
  32. "Dom Bernard Orchard (obituary)". The Telegraph. 8 December 2006. Retrieved 30 May 2008.
  33. Encyclopedia of Monasticism by William M. Johnson, p.713
  34. Kollar 1989 , p. 146
  35. Silent Teaching – The Life of Dom John Main Archived 2006-12-30 at the Wayback Machine , by Paul T. Harris, Spirituality Today, Winter 1988, Vol.40 No. 4, pp. 320–332
  36. "Vatican inquiry into Ealing Abbey child sex abuse", BBC News, 25 October 2011
  37. Kollar 1989 , pp. 191–192
  38. "Abbot of Ealing Abbey resigns over failure to report abuse". The Tablet. Retrieved 9 February 2019.

Bibliography

  • Kollar, Rene (1989). The Return of the Benedictines to London, Ealing Abbey: 1896 to Independence (1 ed.). Burnes and Oates. ISBN   0-86012-175-5.