Buchanan, Colin - Gregory Dix. The Liturgical Bequest (Art.)
Buchanan, Colin - Gregory Dix. The Liturgical Bequest (Art.)
Buchanan, Colin - Gregory Dix. The Liturgical Bequest (Art.)
liturgical Bequest
Colin Buchanan
2001 sees the centenary of the birth of Gregory Dix, one of the most famous
Anglican authors of the twentieth century, one whose person and writings
have haunted me personally, even though he died only halfway through his
century, when I was still at school. Perhaps the fairly recent biography of him
has increased that sense of his breathing down my neck, for page 7 records
that he was born at ... Woolwich! 1 But of course he died young- at merely
50. Twelve years later, in 1964, I joined a Liturgical Commission composed
largely of Dix's contemporaries, and, as I discovered, reflecting much of the
anglo-catholicism of his times, and quite a few of his actual findings.
1 Simon Bailey A Tactful God: Gregory Dix, Priest, Monk and Scholar (Gracewing
1995) p 7
Gregory Dix - The Liturgical Bequest I 263
Again and again in his chapter [in The Apostolic Ministry] we shall find
the same process at work. On some rather tricky point of evidence (such
as the identity of the ellogimon andron of Clement 44 ), Dom Gregory will
state alternative views and come down on the side of that which he
regards as the more probable. A few pages later, this probability is re-
stated as a certainty, and some inference is built upon it. Then that
inference is itself treated as certain, and something else is erected on it.
The argument is very skilfully knit together; and the final conclusion has
every appearance of certainty, and of depending on irrefragable evidence;
it is only as the careful reader who notices the points at which possibility
has been treated as certainty, and who is able to assess the balance of
improbability in the conclusion of the argument.
If you are aware of these traits of his scholarship, and you bear in mind my
point above about how we nearly overlapped with each other, you will not be
surprised that I once wrote about him, as one of three 'might-have-beens' in
the compilation and production of the ASB:
Just suppose that Gregory Dix had lived. Suppose his mischievous,
maverick, learned perversity had been charming, beguiling and bewitching
the liturgical commission and all its works. How then would the course of
revision have gone?3
Dix was born in 1901 of an anglo-catholic family, of whom both his father
and his brother were also in due course ordained. He himself was ordained in
1924, spending a short time as a tutor at Keble College before being
professed as an Anglican Benedictine (characterized by 'OSB' after his name)
in 1926. He impacted the life of the Church of England both by his writings
(which, beginning with book reviews in the 1920s, came thick and fast in the
1930s and 1940s) and his personal presence and force of character and
argument, which flowered greatly in the last few years of his life. We shall
return to his writings; here it is worth noting that from 1946 to 1952 he
2 Stephen Neill in 'A General Survey' in S C Neill et al The Ministry of the Church
(London: Canterbury Press 1947) p 15
3 C 0 Buchanan 'Revision in the Church of England in Retrospect' in Kenneth
Stevenson ed The Liturgy Reshaped (SPCK 1982) p 156
264 I Churchman
Kirk described him as 'my oldest and closest friend'. If one added in a
plethora of distinguished anglo-catholic names, led by Arthur Couratin and
Eric Mascall, there was, in effect, in the 1940s a new Oxford Movement. If,
in the light of history, it appears in point of time to have come near to the end
of the anglo-catholic hegemony in the Church of England, one would perhaps
hardly have guessed it at the time. Going up to Oxford as an undergraduate
in 1955, I was myself aware of the heavily anglo-catholic presuppositions in
respect of the Church of England which were widespread, with resourcing in
depth from Pusey House, St Stephen's House, the Cowley Fathers, many
parish churches (not least St Mary Magdalene's), and the general run of both
tutors in theology on the one hand and college chaplains on the other.
Much of the energy of Dix's political involvement in the 1940s lay in relation
to the Church of South India. The union of four Anglican dioceses with the
Methodists of South India and the South India United Church (itself the fruit
of an earlier union of Congregationalists and Presbyterians) came about on
27 September 1947; but it came about only after years of marching and
counter-marching in the Church of England and round the Anglican world as
to whether it should be 'allowed' to happen at all; and, when it did come
about, it was followed by further years of passionate squabbling as to the
exact judgment to be passed upon the union, and the degree to which others
should be discouraged from going down the same route. It is enough to note
that Dix was at the very centre of this controversy, unyielding in his
conviction that Anglicans in South India were guilty of heresy in accepting as
4 Eric W Kemp The Life and Letters of Kenneth Escott Kirk, Bishop of Oxford 1937-
1954 (Hodder & Stoughton 1959) p 198. To be fair, Eric Kemp speculates that Kirk's
influence on Dix's opinions was as great as Dix's on his. Kemp is son-in-law to Kirk.
Gregory Dix - The Liturgical Bequest I 265
presbyters those who had not been ordained by bishops. In the process, of
course, he contributed before the union came about a very weighty chapter
entitled 'The Ministry in the Early Church' to Kirk's massive polemic in
defence of 'Apostolic Succession' over against the South India scheme. 5 The
chapter is wholly typical of Dix - for we know the conclusion before we start,
and the major interest lies in seeing what evidence is laid under contribution
by him in order to reach that conclusion conclusively. In the event, a bright
new coin of theological currency was produced from his purse - the Jewish
office of shaliach - one who was appointed as a bearer, holder and even
guardian of a message. My impression is that scholars and reviewers have
been unpersuaded, not least because, even if this shadowy role of a Jewish
office does lie behind the early church bishop, the connection is unprovable
and the argument is therefore no more than illustrative or inferential, and
cannot compel. It would be extraordinary indeed if our basis for being
Anglicans - and Anglicans with this doctrine of the non-negotiable
foundational character for the church of the historic episcopate - were to be
identified as Dix's exposition of the shaliach. It was his methodology in this
particular essay which drew from Stephen Neill the memorable assessment of
its author which I have quoted above.
South India, however, was not his sole preoccupation with ordination issues. At
the same time as attacking that scheme, he was busy trying to keep a fence
intact behind his back, over against Rome, in relation to those same Anglican
orders. His slender book on the matter, The Question of Anglican Orders, was
reprinted three times between 1944 and 1948 before going to a new edition
after his death. It is interestingly pastoral in its conception - letters written to
restrain an anglo-catholic layman who is quivering on the brink of departing to
Rome. The 'Harry' who receives these letters is a compound figure, focussing all
the doubts Dix has ever had expressed to him by people in that position; and
Dix's own reasoning, wonderfully attuned to the situation, should, we
conjecture, be just enough to establish a permanent lodging-place for this poor
quivering figure near that brink, but safely just this side of it. 6 The poor man
has been a happy and committed high churchman, but the doubts about
It is not, however, for the battles which Dix fought in his lifetime that his
memory lives on today. The impact of the man lies in his writings, and his
writings cover a vast range of liturgical, sacramental and ecclesiological
topics. I want here to put his teachings on both baptism and holy communion
under the spotlight.
Dix never wrote a big book on baptism. The major bits of relevant evidence
are two opuscula, published over a decade apart from each other. These are:
Confirmation or Laying on of Hands? (Theology Occasional Paper no 5,
SPCK 1936) and The Theology of Confirmation in Relation to Baptism
(Dacre/Black 1946). Both are reinforced by Dix's own edition, with
translation, of Hippolytus The Apostolic Tradition of St Hippolytus (SPCK
for Church Historical Society 1937). The overall thrust is to state that
sacramental initiation involves two stages, water-baptism and baptism-in-the-
Spirit (which, in sacramental terms, is a post-baptismal laying on of hands or
anointing, a ceremony we call 'confirmation'). Virtually all references to the
coming of the Spirit in Scripture and the fathers are to be under~tood as
presupposing this second ceremony - which might not be mentioned in
various writings, but which could still be asserted to be necessarily
understood. By this teaching Dix gave scholarly and passionate support to
those tempted to teach such two-stage initiation (often bishops), though
hindsight suggests he actually ended an era (which was far from his
intention). It was an era which had begun through the teaching of Fuller7 and
of A J Mason. 8 It was virtually brought to its conclusion with Dix and so has
been half-affectionately known since then as the 'Mason-Dixline'. 9
The two-stagers who came after him - Edward Ratcliffe, Lionel Thornton,
Arthur Couratin, J D C Fisher and Cyril Pocknee - were clearly trying to halt
a slow landslide away from their position and could never match the
confidence and insouciance with which Dix had held it. Indeed the first major
challenge came soon after Dix's death, when Geoffrey Lampe published The
Seal of the Spirit (Longmans 1953), demonstrating that the general run of
patristic teaching associated the gift, coming or baptism of the Spirit with
water-baptism, and that sacramental initiation is in principle therefore but
one stage - water-baptism. Other ceremonies, while they may be powerful
accessories, are not of the essence of the sacrament at all, and baptism can
stand as complete without them.
The run-down of the Mason-Dixline reached the beginning of its end in 1970.
8 Does one have to explain the hint of pun in the 'Mason-Dix Line'? The original
Mason-Dixon Line demarcated slave-owning from non-slave-owning states in the
pre-Civil War United States.
9 The Theology of Confirmation in Relation to Baptism p 12
10 See Justin's Apology I 65
11 I made my own contribution to this when, in 1967, I wrote a note of strong
preference- 'The Rev C 0 Buchanan would have preferred the ...
268 I Churchman
But there remained the question of the future of the liturgical texts. Dix did
not insist that baptism and confirmation should be administered together, as
others of his school have pressed. But he did insist that they belonged
together, and must be taught as belonging together, and as together
constituting sacramental initiation. It is not fanciful to see the impact of his
teaching in the production by the Liturgical Commission of the first new draft
services of which Common Worship is a descendant. Those first draft rites
were Baptism and Confirmation (SPCK 1959), and they were the first
Anglican rites since the Reformation to provide for both water and the laying
on of episcopal hands to come in the same rite. In particular they had a high
doctrine of the coming of the Spirit in confirmation. In successive revisions -
ie through Series 2 (1967-68), Series 3 (1978), ASB (1980) and Common
Worship 1998)- that emphasis has been reduced. 12 But the structuring has
remained, teaching that, for adults especially, the way into the life of the
church is by baptism-and-confirmation (and reception of communion). This
seems to go beyond the New Testament and leave a strong suspicion of a
mandatory 'two-stage' process in place. It has been amended in the Anglican
Church of Canada in their Book of Alternative Services (1985), so that the
laying on the bishop's hands is no longer mandatory; but other Provinces do
12 I moved a following motion to the Ely debate in our General Synod in 1974,
proposing (as the Ely report had done) that the requirement of confirmation for
those being baptized as adults should be rescinded. This was unwelcome to the
House of Bishops in particular (bishops have tended to have a Pavlovian reflex that
anything which touched confirmation threatened their ministry) and was seen off
rapidly. In the 1995-2000 General Synod I tabled a Private Member's Motion to
the same effect, but this failed because not enough people added their names to it -
a double oddity, in my prejudiced judgment, as Evangelicals frequently complain to
me about this requirement of confirmation, whilst those on Synod totally failed to
see their opportunity ...
Gregory Dix - The Liturgical Bequest I 269
not yet seem to have cleared their heads or their rites. 13 So the dead hand of
the two-stagers is still upon us liturgically, even though their teaching has
been largely outflanked. 14
The first of these relates to Cranmer. Dix, in terms of his own belief, would
obviously have been amongst those who burned Cranmer; and his chapter on
the English Reformation and Cranmer's Prayer Books in The Shape of the
Liturgy is sweepingly opposed to everything Cranmer stood for doctrinally,
whilst greatly admiring of his ability to write brilliant liturgical prose in (as
Dix sees it) a theologically bad cause. As a matter of historical judgment, this
was no innovation in itself - if we go right back to Pusey and Keble, we find
an acknowledgment that Cranmer's own doctrine may have been receptionist.
However, the greatweight of anglo-catholic thinking for a hundred years had
coupled to their reluctant concessions about Cranmer's own doctrine the
following confident assertions:
13 Of course, some of this goes back much further - to 1662. In that year, a 'Riper
Years' baptismal rite was authorized for the first time, and the (political?)
requirement of confirmation for those thus baptized was added. The confirmation
rite in 1662 was not adapted to this at all- it assumed all being confirmed had been
through infant baptism. It is, of course, just possible to make sense of someone who
has been baptized in riper years one week, then coming the following week and
ratifying those vows, even though they had been made in his or her own person
rather than by proxy through godparents. But it is impossible, once both rites are
combined in one service, for the confirmation to involve any ratifying of the
baptismal vows, for the vows are uttered but once and are taken for granted
thereafter. So, if the Church of England's doctrine is in the Book of Common Prayer,
then it has to be said we have no doctine of confirmation that will let it follow on
from baptism all within the one rite. On the other hand, I have to say, as a bishop,
how joyous and liturgically helpful it is to have adults being baptized at a
confirmation- but I have to add that the confirmation following is fairly pointless ...
14 I shall here allow myself a liberty, which I hope will not be misunderstood, of
calling the communion service the 'eucharist'. I do not believe anything doctrinal
hangs on this terminology, and I shall most certainly need the adjective 'eucharistic'
rather than a clumsy circumlocution ...
15 'This was what it all came to in the end - the bread had nothing to do with the
Body- That was what he was dying for -' (The Shape of the Liturgy p 674)
2 70 I Churchman
b that 1552 may have had other hands pushing him beyond where he himself
wanted to go;
c that even so, whatever his personal views, his writing of the 1552 liturgy
retained the necessary minimum of catholic doctrinal orthodoxy;
d that in any case 1552 was itself re-catholicized in 1559 and 1662; and
Each assertion here is actually insecure, and Dix blew it all sky-high, and was as
pityingly scathing about anglo-catholics who could so kid themselves, as he was
about Protestants who claimed to believe what Cranmer believed. Indeed, he
spent much less time on the latter group (presumably the readers of
Churchman), largely, I think, because they were not half so visible above ground
as the usual run of anglo-catholics, and the tussle in which he saw himself as
chiefly engaged was with the leadership of the Church of England of his time.
And this leadership, insofar as it ir.cluded any persons inclined towards
Protestantism, had no one matching the catholics for scholarship or influence.
So what was the Dix thesis about Cranmer and the Reformation? It went as
follows:
b this doctrine is: that Christ died for our sins on the cross, that we are
forgiven when we remember that, and that we are thus justified by an
essentially mental action relating to past time;
d the Lord's Supper therefore, whilst it includes language about eating the
Gregory Dix- The Liturgical Bequest I 271
flesh of Christ, only means thereby that we receive the bread and remember
thankfully that Christ died for us;
What has always been dear to me is that Evangelicals - yea, even my own
beloved mentor, Jim Packer - have been far too quick to pick up as a
compliment Dix's judgment on Cranmer's eucharistic liturgy that 'it is the
only effective attempt ever made to give liturgical expression to the doctrine
of "justification by faith" .' 18 A closer inspection of his caricature of the
doctrine of justification (as set out in outline above) shows that it is no
compliment at all for Cranmer's rite to be characterized as giving liturgical
expression to it.
16 'We can see here the effect of Luther's perpetual primary assumption about the end
of religion, that it is not the worship of God, but the comfort of man' (The Shape
of the Liturgy p 635)
17 See The Shape of the Liturgy p 672 - quoted by Jim Packer in xxx
18 C W Dugmore The Mass and the English Reformers (MacMillan 1958). It is
instructive to notice that Dix figures nowhere in Dugmore's index.
272 I Churchman
Dix's distinguishing that the Reformation was about real issues, it was
catholics who saw the ground disappearing from under their feet. Indeed it
might be put more strongly - the whole basis of their claim to be Anglican at
all was vanishing before their eyes. Certainly their dependence upon the
conventional wisdom about the Reformation was. If not only Cranmer
himself was Zwinglian, but his rites (including 1549) were also, then was it
possible either to sustain a belief in minimal catholic continuity through the
Reformation, or to resist the Pope's condemnation of Anglican orders on the
grounds of the inadequacy of the eucharistic rites of the Reformation period?
I have not traced closely how the anglo-catholic constituency at large
responded, but history records particularly the critique of George Timms in
Dixit Cranmer - to which Dix replied crushingly in Dixit Cranmer et non
Timuit. That does not mean that all anglo-cathoiic apologias for a 'catholic'
Thomas Cranmer ceased; indeed a fuller, if less specifically targeted,
restatement of their received view of the Reformation came, for instance,
from C W Dugmore.t9
But the question here is not whether Dix disturbed the received traditions of
catholics about the Book of Common Prayer, but whether Evangelicals can
take him at face-value. Leaving aside for the moment his description of
justification through faith, we can ask the question as to whether Evangelicals
can truly applaud Dix's account of Cranmer and his rites. The difficulty lies in
part within Cranmer himself, in that before the Reformation everyone knew
what to 'eat the body of Christ' meant; however, once the Reformation was in
full flood, no one could use the phrase without adding a lengthy explanation
as to what he meant by it. Cranmer's explanations are particularly lengthy (he
wrote five volumes of his work against Gardner), but, of course, there is little
comparable scope to incorporate such explanations within a liturgical rite.
The text therefore has to stand as carrying its meaning transparently within
itself and, even if it includes some warnings (a step the Reformers were ready
to take), it must generally be read positively and with all the riches of
scriptural promise which are in principle inherent in the rite for penitent
believers. So Cranmer is ready to affirm that in the Lord's Supper the faithful
do indeed eat the body of Christ and drink his blood, and is ready to write
texts which state this - and this in turn always gave anglo-catholics
opportunity to greet the BCP communion rite as containing the catholic truth
(they have been much unhappier with Article XXIX!), whereas Dix is saying
19 The Shape of the Liturgy p 161
Gregory Dix- The Liturgical Bequest I 273
that, in Cranmer's drafting, 'eat the body of Christ' means no more than
'believe earnestly that Jesus died for us', and that the 'action' is therefore
wholly internal or subjective, and the eating of the bread (which is mere
bread) is coincidental with, but strictly unconnected with, that true action.
Dix works this through fairly consistently, seizing on authors whose writings
help the case, and, in his translation of Hippolytus and elsewhere, translating
Jesus' command as 'Do my anamrzesis' and our response in the following
paragraph as 'Doing therefore the anamnesis of his death and resurrection,
we offer to thee the bread and cup .. .' .21 It is worth giving the bones of a
response thus:
a It is not at all clear that anamnesis means this objective 're-calling before
God'; and some further work on the biblical texts Dix cites has other
authors coming up with other answers. I suggest that there is a greater case
today for locating the 'action' of anamnesis in my (or your) mind. 22
Certainly the old Roman rite always started its Latin anamnesis 'Unde et
memores', picking up the Vulgate of 1 Cor 1124-5, and the post-Vatican 11
English texts in the Roman Catholic Church use phrases like 'Calling to
mind'. In other words, even the most explicit texts about eucharistic
sacrifice in the Roman Catholic corpus never located it within the concept
of anamnesis, but rather as an action validated by tradition and conciliar
decree in its own right, and done accompanying the remembering of
Christ's death and resurrection. And Dix himself would have been highly
critical of that English translation, 'Calling to mind' - though he might
have been fairly thrown to find Roman Catholic liturgy in English anyway,
let alone with new texts! 23
Interestingly, there has been another side to The Shape of the Liturgy which
has found far more widespread acceptance- and rightly so in my judgment. I
refer to the 'four-action shape' of the eucharist. His central thrust is to
emphasize that the eucharist becomes what it is from the 'shape' of its
celebration. Our Lord had four actions with the bread, three later with the
cup. When these are assimilated to each other, then there emerges: (1) taking;
(2) thanksgiving; (3) breaking the bread; and (4) distribution. This pattern is
very clear in, say, Justin Martyr in the mid-second century. And in some ways
it has a greater authenticity than the Prayer Book rite- for, whilst 1662 says
that we 'take' at the point where Jesus 'took', and 'break' at the point where
Jesus 'broke', the result is to run the whole action in 30 seconds, to omit a
true thanksgiving (for we cannot stop and 'give thanks' at the point where we
say he 'gave thanks') and to deliver ourselves to the concept of a 'prayer of
consecration' rather than a 'great thanksgiving'. 25 Dix gave us great problems
in identifying the laying of the table with the first of his four 'dominical acts',
and thus invented or at least popularized a great raft of 'offertory theology'.
In the Church of England, we have managed to bring this to the point where
there is a real distinction between the (wholly preliminary) preparing of the
table and a distinct 'taking' of the bread and wine before the thanksgiving
starts.