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Wednesday, 3 May 2023

Canterbury calling?

Archbishop of York (Source: Diocese of York)                                         Bishop of London  (Source: Crediton Courier)


Rumours abound that the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, will resign after the coronation of King Charles III.

He has said that he hoped to remain the Archbishop of Canterbury until he reaches retirement age in 2026, if he is in "good health" and "people are happy" with him in the post. 

Very many people are unhappy with Welby's performance as Archbishop of Canterbury, including the majority of Anglicans. Schism looms. Will he go?

Welby's role in turning a Christian coronation service into a multi-faith event has not gone down well. 

His 'off-piste' oath plan has backfired. "Buckingham Palace officials fear the Coronation oath could cloud the ceremony due to the criticism surrounding the 'Homage of the People'."

Those of us old enough to recall the solemnity of Queen Elizabeth's coronation will witness a different ceremony, one built around wokery to include people with entirely different beliefs, some of which reject the Christian message.

The Coronation Liturgy shows that the Epistle (Colossians 1: 9-17) is to be read by a Hindu Prime Minister. Hindus worship many gods so which god will the Prime Minister have in mind? 

Nothing seems to matter in the Church of England other than being conformed to the world.

On that score, if Welby were to retire, the Archbishop of York and the bishop of London have both shown themselves to be unsuitable.

Bishop Sarah Mullally ended  her Living in Love and Faith Presentation  with the words:

"I hope that we will not just ‘look to your own interests, but to the interests of others.’
...May God hold us in the redeeming love of Christ and bless us with the guiding
presence of the Holy Spirit.
Amen."

The guiding  presence of the Holy Spirit is evident not in the Church of England  but in GAFCON:

"Despite 25 years of persistent warnings by most Anglican Primates, repeated departures from the authority of God's Word have torn the fabric of the Communion. These warnings were blatantly and deliberately disregarded and now without repentance this tear cannot be mended."

The Archbishop of York has not heeded the message. In his presidential address at the April 2023 York synod he claimed that "We are not judged by 'doctrinal orthodoxy' but 'love', reminiscent of TEC presiding bishop Michael Curry's Love is the way!

What the Church of England needs is an Archbishop of Canterbury can bring the Church back to faith as neatly explained here by Calvin Robinson in his Common Sense Crusade.

6 comments:

  1. As to Archbishop Welby's successor at Canterbury it may be worth keeping an eye on Chester. By tradition it should be the turn of an Anglo Catholic to be the next Primate of All England but sadly suitable candidates are few and far between.
    Ramsey - Catholic
    Coggan - Evangelical
    Runcie - Catholic
    Carey - Evangelical
    Williams - Catholic
    Welby - Evangelical
    ?????

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    1. It might be time for a liberal for a change....

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  2. Baptist Trainfan3 May 2023 at 14:01

    You say, "The Coronation Liturgy shows that the Epistle (Colossians 1: 9-17) is to be read by a Hindu Prime Minister". Surely, on an occasion such as this, he's reading it because of his status as a Commonwealth Prime Minister, not because he's a Hindu.

    I'm sure that other people who will take roles in the ceremony are hardly card-carrying Christians. This (to me) depicts rather well the inherent tensions and difficulties of having a "state Church" with the Monarch as its earthly head (although I recognise that the CinW is diseatablished).

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  3. Bishop of Gloucester -Rachel Treweek. Personable and bright. Time for a woman.

    LG.

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    Replies
    1. The Church of England has been led by a woman since drippy Rowan Willims' time.

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    2. Keeping doing the crossword Ruthy

      LG

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