Archbishop of Canterbury's Presidential Address at
ACC-13
I
Who are we talking to in this meeting? To be a Christian is to believe we are
commanded and authorised to say certain things to the world; to say things that
will make disciples of all nations. Our words matter. We have to think with care
about them and to try and know something of how they will be heard. If they are
not heard as good news from God, as words that change the world and release
people from various sorts of prison, what has gone wrong? Are we talking only to
ourselves?
This week it will be of the greatest importance that we remember to ask,
whenever we say anything, whether we are doing more than talking to ourselves -
and to ask what will be heard in what we say here and how far it helps or
hinders the communicating of the gospel of Jesus. A gathering like this always
attracts a degree of media attention, and we can guess already what the pattern
of this is likely to be - 'The Communion is in great trouble; conservatives and
liberals are going to split from each other'. Different people will have
different stories to tell, with different interests to serve. These stories will
be the subject of still more stories, and the rapid fire of exchanges will
continue to stream across the electronic pathways. That is the way of the world.
And however unworldly we may like to think ourselves, somehow we remain the
world's captives in this connection.
But meanwhile the bulk of the media's attention will probably be focused
elsewhere - on the meeting that will take place just after we have finished, the
meeting of the G8 leaders. Grief, anger and frustration at the injustice of the
world's trade systems and at the sluggishness of wealthy nations in addressing
the menace of systematic environmental degradation is boiling over, here in the
UK and in many other places. The report of the Africa Commission here a couple
of months ago outlined the challenges and opportunities that face the wealthy
nations, and the continuing horror of disease and violence and corrupt,
dysfunctional government that imprisons millions. Africa is the focus, but it is
not a challenge in relation to Africa alone. Debt and poverty and oppression are
realities for other continents. Corrupt government afflicts supposedly
'developed' nations too. And the environmental crisis confronts all of us with
growing urgency. But at the moment, the question most sharply in focus is, 'What
do the most powerful nations in the world intend to do to reduce even a little
the burden of suffering that afflicts those over whom their power is exercised
in various ways?'
This is what a large part of the general public at least in this country will be
thinking about this week. Some of those, especially those who are most committed
to the ending of poverty and injustice, will be people who speak the same
language as us; they will be people of faith, often Christian faith. And we have
to ask what if anything they will hear from us that is good news for them and
for the poor for whom they burn with Christ-like indignation. Are we talking to
them at all? What have we to say?
The chances are that they will hear a little of what we say - like a set of
noises off, a bit of background buzz. Here is a group of Christians talking to
each other, they will think, arguing over matters that seem quite a long way
from the plight of a child soldier in Northern Uganda or a mother with HIV/AIDS
in Lesotho or a sweatshop worker or fisherman in South Asia. Some will react
with contempt - what a parade of foolish anger and bigotry or self-importance,
what a fuss over the 'rights' of the prosperous; some will react with
indifference; and some with real sorrow that we are not speaking to them and the
world they know.
And for at least some of those - indeed, for many, I suspect - it is not that
they are wanting us to abandon talking about our faith so as to talk about the
world's crisis. They are wanting us to talk about Jesus and what Jesus has to
say to this crisis. They know the economics and the politics, even the ethics;
they don't need us for that. But they do want to hear a word from the one we
call our saviour. Are we speaking to them about him?
II
I shall come back in a moment to what we might be saying about Jesus. Because
some may object that I am trying to distract the meeting from addressing the
immediate issue that needs resolution in our church, the questions around the
limits of our diversity, the location of our authority and the rightness of
certain developments in attitudes to sex. So let me say that I have no intention
of making any distracting manoeuvre; I want only to point out where and when we
are meeting and thus the way in which what we say may well be heard. I point
this out also so that we can ourselves remember the background to our debates on
these matters - since they are not just about morality and biblical authority
but about perceptions of how power is used in the church and world, how agendas
are set. The political and economic world in which the prosperous set the agenda
is the same world that is at work in the Church, so many feel, a world where
discussions are held and priorities agreed an!
d decisions taken in ways that exclude those who don't have the language or the
leverage. North-South inequality is a real issue in our church context, however
hard it is for the 'North' to hear this.
But since some may challenge whether all this is about taking our eyes off the
immediate problem, I shall say a few words about the present crisis - hoping
that these reflections will in fact lead us back to the fundamental question of
what we are saying and to whom. The debate over sexuality is a story that can be
told more than one way. One story is this. The churches of the 'North' are tired
and confused, losing evangelistic energy. For a variety of reasons, they have
been trying to reclaim their credibility by accepting and seeking to domesticate
the moral values of their culture, even though this is a culture that is
practically defined by the rejection of the living God. A history of
over-intellectual approaches to the Bible and the communication of the faith has
led to a disregard of the Bible's call to transformation. The revolt against the
plain meaning of Scripture's condemnation of same-sex activity is a symptom of
this general malaise.
Another story is this. The churches of the North have been made aware of how
much their life and work has been sustained in the past by insensitive and
oppressive social patterns, with the Bible being used to justify great evils.
Whether they like it or not, they inhabit a world where authority is regarded
with much suspicion; it has to earn respect. In recent decades there has been a
huge change in the general understanding of sexual activity. Can the gospel be
heard in such a world if it seems to cling to ways of understanding sexuality
that have no correspondence to what the most apparently responsible people in
our culture believe? It is not enough, some have said, to stick to the words of
the Bible; we have to go deeper and ask about the logic and direction of the
Bible as a whole. And when we do that, we may find that it is not so impossible
to reach a position that can be taken seriously in contemporary culture.
Two stories, and so for some we have a problem of the Church accepting a set of
false premises, a wrong and unbiblical picture of human nature; for others a
problem of communicating with human beings where they actually are, in terms
they can grasp. Many issues are involved here, not only the presenting question
about homosexuality. Perhaps the most difficult is how we make a moral
assessment of modern culture in the developed world. And for many of us this is
complicated. Modernity has brought great goods; yet in vital respects it has
promoted a picture of humanity that is deeply flawed - individualistic, obsessed
with rights and claims and uninterested in bonds of obligation or the need for
sacrifice for the good of others: precisely the world that has produced our
current nightmare of international injustice. So the question is how far the
concern for reaching an understanding with the world about sexual ethics is
based on uncritical acceptance of the values of a culture !
like this.
I don't think that this question is quickly resolved. There are those who say,
'This is an issue of justice, comparable to the rights of black people in the
Western world, or the rights of women. Our church must be inclusive of all,
committed to liberation for all from the burden of prejudice and hatred'. And
there are those who say, 'The Bible is clear; there is no argument to be had'.
Yet the latter people often in practice find they are themselves interpreting
Scripture more flexibly in other areas. And the former people may have to
recognise that there is a difference between campaigning for civil equality and
declaring discipline or defining holiness for the Church of Christ, a difference
between including all who come to Christ and being indifferent to how human
lives are actually challenged and altered by him.
Very tentatively, I believe this is how we should see our situation. Christian
teaching about sex is not a set of isolated prohibitions; it is an integral part
of what the Bible has to say about living in such a way that our lives
communicate the character of God. Marriage has a unique place because it speaks
of an absolute faithfulness, a covenant between radically different persons,
male and female; and so it echoes the absolute covenant of God with his chosen,
a covenant between radically different partners. And those who have criticised
the blessing of same-sex partnerships have been trying, I think, to say that we
cannot change what we say about marriage without seriously upsetting what you
might call the ecology of our teaching, the balance of how we show and speak of
God. They would say that blessing same-sex unions has this effect, and that
without such blessing people living in such unions are at least in tension with
the common language of the Church. And living in!
this tension is not a good basis for taking on the responsibilities of
leadership, especially episcopal leadership, whatever latitude we allow to
conscience and pastoral discretion in particular instances among our people.
This, incidentally, is broadly the view of the authors of the 'St Andrew's Day
Statement' of 1997, which remains a helpful reference point, managing to avoid a
bitter politicising of the dispute. Its method deserves more imitation than it
has received.
So there are two issues coming out of this that need patient study. What is the
nature of a holy and Christ-like life for someone who has consistent homosexual
desires? And what is the appropriate discipline to be applied to the personal
life of the pastor in the Church? The last Lambeth Conference concluded that the
reasons I have just outlined made it impossible to justify a change in existing
practice and discipline; and the majority voice of the Communion holds firmly to
this decision. It is possible to uphold this decision and still say that there
are many unanswered questions in the theological picture just outlined, and that
a full discussion of these needs a far more careful attention to how homosexual
people see themselves and their relations. The Lambeth Resolution called for
just this. It also condemned in clear terms, as did earlier Lambeth Conferences,
the Windsor Report and the Primates' Dromantine statement, violent and bigoted
language about homosexual people - and this cannot be repeated too often. It is
possible to uphold Lambeth '98 and to oppose the shocking persecution of
homosexuals in some countries, to defend measures that guarantee their civil
liberties. The question is not about that level of acceptance, but about what
the Church requires in its ordained leaders and what patterns of relationship it
will explicitly recognise as unquestionably revealing of God. On these matters,
the Church is not persuaded that change is right. And where there is a strong
scriptural presumption against change, a long consensus of teaching in Christian
history, and a widespread ecumenical agreement, it may well be thought that
change would need an exceptionally strong critical mass to justify it.
That, I think, is where the Communion as a whole stands. That is why actions by
some provinces have caused outrage and hurt. To invite, as does the Windsor
document, those provinces to reconsider is not to say that there are no issues
to be resolved, no prejudice to be repented of (because there unquestionably is
much of this); it is not to reject the idea of an 'inclusive' Church or to
canonise an unintelligent reading of the Bible. It is to say that actions taken
in sensitive matters against the mind of the Church cannot go unchallenged while
the Church's overall discernment is as it is without injuring the delicate
fabric of relations within the Church and so compromising its character.
It is said that there are times when Christians must act prophetically, ahead of
the consensus, and that this is such a time for some of our number. We should
listen with respect to what motivates this conviction. But we also have to say
that it is in the very nature of a would-be prophetic act that we do not yet
know whether it is an act of true prophecy or an expression of human feeling
only. To claim to act prophetically is to take a risk. It would be strange if we
claimed the right to act in a risky way and then protested because that risky
act was not universally endorsed by the Church straight away. If truth is put
before unity - to use the language that is now common in discussing this - you
must not be surprised if unity truly and acutely suffers.
III
But what is this teaching us about our character as a church? There is one
deeply uncomfortable lesson to ponder, which is best expressed in shorthand by
saying that we are in danger of falling into exactly the trap that St Paul lays
for his readers in the beginning of his letter to the Romans. He has begun by
defining 'God's way of righting wrong' (1.17), which is by faith; and he then
gives a vivid account of the wrong that needs to be righted. Human beings are in
revolt against the creator, exchanging (he repeats the word) what is natural for
what is unnatural. He lists those things which for Jewish readers and
sympathetic Gentiles would most obviously suggest revolt against God's will.
People know what is natural yet invent alternatives - whether it is intercourse
with the same sex, worship of material things, breaking promises or using their
God-given skills of speech to spread evil reports. But, says Paul as he begins
chapter 2, this is not about some distant 'they'; it is about 'you', his
readers, then and now. You know what is natural but do not do it, and you pass
judgment on others, so condemning yourself. Paul does not say that the sins he
has listed in ch.1 are not sins at all; he simply points out that he has been
egging us on in recognising the sins of others so as to expose our own deadly
lack of self-knowledge. This is terrible, he says, isn't it? And this and this?
And we eagerly say yes; so that he can turn on us and say, 'So now you know how
terrible is the lack in your own heart of the recognition of your rebellion,
whatever it is.'
'Whenever you erect yourself upon a pedestal, you do wrong; whenever you say 'I'
or 'we' or 'it is so', you exchange the glory of the incorruptible for the image
of the corruptible ... By striding ahead of others, even though it be for their
assistance, as though the secret of God were known to you, you manifest yourself
ignorant of His secret ... Even 'brokenness'; even the behaviour of the
'Biblical Man' - if these proceed from the adoption of a point of view, of a
method, of a system, or of a particular kind of behaviour, by which men
distinguish themselves from other men - are no more than the righteousness of
men'. These are words from the greatest commentary on Romans in the modern era,
Karl Barth's masterpiece (pp.56-7); and they should drive us to some very hard
questions. When we call on others to repent, can we hear God calling us to
recognise our own rebellion, whatever it is? If not, have we understood faith?
We are always in danger of the easiest religious techn!
ique of all, the search for the scapegoat; Paul insists without any shadow of
compromise upon our solidarity in rebellion against God, and so tells us that we
shall not achieve peace and virtue by creating a community we believe to be
pure. And these words are spoken both to the Jew and the Gentile, both to the
prophetic radical and the loyal traditionalist. The prophet, says Barth later in
his commentary, 'knows the catastrophe of the Church to be inevitable' (cheering
words!) and he knows also that there is no friendly lifeboat into which he can
clamber and row clear of the imminent disaster' (336).
'We are all butchers pretending to be sacrificers. When we understand this, the
skandalon - the stumbling block -- that we had always managed to discharge upon
some scapegoat becomes our own responsibility, a stone as unbearably heavy upon
our hearts as Jesus himself upon the saint's shoulders in the Christopher
legend'. Not Barth this time, but René Girard, the French philosopher (A Theatre
of Envy: William Shakespeare, p.341), once again paraphrasing Paul's central
theme. When we have said all there is to say about our discipline and how we
reinforce it, about the practical crises of deciding what degree of communion we
can enjoy with some of our brothers and sisters - and no doubt these things have
to be settled - we had better remember this level of solidarity with whoever it
is we have separated from. The deepest spiritual problem is not resolved by
separating ourselves from the sinner, whatever has to be done in the short term
(and Paul of course exercises discipline robustly); God's word to us remains the
challenge of Romans 2. And what grieves me about so much of our current debate
is that I see few signs of awareness of this deeper level, and a good deal of
the effort to 'distinguish ourselves' from each other, in Barth's terms, whether
we call ourselves radicals or traditionalists. Even for me to say this in these
terms opens me to the same charge - Do you hear what I said? -- I am 'grieved'
by the failings of others. I too have to accept that I am part of this failing
or 'catastrophic' church.
So that we are driven back to the place where Paul started: God's way of
righting wrong. Can we allow this present crisis to teach us something basic
about the good news? Because of the cross of Jesus and his resurrection, we may
trust that God has acted to overcome our rebellion and more, to bring us into a
renewed world. In that world, we live in gratitude to God and in a pervasive
sense of involvement in and responsibility for each other. We acknowledge that
we shall none of us be healed alone. We confess that each of us is made poor and
sick by the poverty and sickness of our brothers and sisters. So we do not
shrink, therefore, from fellow believers who have erred and reconstruct
ourselves as a pure remnant; we admit that we are all now suffering. Likewise we
need each other's life and hope, we need each other's positive experience -
which is why the life of the churches of the 'North' would be so deprived if
they separated from the life of the 'South' (and vice versa, !
since there is good news to be had in the global North too).
So the answer to the question, 'What is this teaching us about our character and
our life as a church?' seems to be this. If we have understood what Paul says
about faith we shall understand that we all stand together in sin and need. When
we acknowledge our sin and our need of God's grace, we also begin to see our
need of each other in the Body of Christ. What we have to do is to work hard to
see that - whatever else happens to us as a Communion - we don't lose the sense
of our dependence upon grace, not on success or human virtue.
IV
Who are we talking to? What we have to say to the world - a world that is
concentrating on what we too must address, the challenge to the world's wealthy
- what we have to say to the world is just this: God calls human persons to a
life in which poverty is everyone's poverty and wealth is everyone's wealth.
This is how St Paul in II Corinthians describes the Christian life. This is the
life that makes the Church the way it is. This doesn't mean that the Church is
an agency or a movement for political change. It simply is new life, new
creation. When human life is renewed in this way, so that poverty and wealth are
re-imagined like this, the result is something like the Church; and Christians
will insist that only through the act and call of God is any of this ever
possible, and only in conscious relation with Jesus is it fully realised. When
we celebrate the Holy Communion, we are not awarding each other points for good
behaviour or orthodox teaching but we are showing what !
it will be like in the Kingdom of Heaven - Christ's life given equally to all as
all share in one bread; every communicant called by name to God's table, so that
we have to look at every other communicant as God's beloved guest. Out of this
flows the vision of a renewed world that keeps alive our hope and our anger at a
system that treats so many as unwelcome in the world, nameless statistics,
making no contribution to the life of others, dispensable.
Now the more we live and speak - this week and every week - as Church in this
sense, the more we shall have to say to the real world. Christians should
emphatically be campaigning for justice for the poor - but the Church is not a
campaign. From time to time I am challenged to state 'my' vision or 'my' agenda
for the Church. But we need real caution in using such language. The Church is
the new creation, it is life and joy, it is the sacramental fellowship in which
we share the ultimate purpose of God, made real for us now in our hearing the
Word and sharing the Sacrament. What has this to do with anyone's 'agenda'? The
Church is always greater than this, and the vision we most deeply need is the
vision of new creation.
The Russian Orthodox theologian Alexander Schmemann distinguishes the Church
from a sect very simply by saying that a sect is always transforming itself into
an 'agency', committed to a succession of causes, and he says, 'it easily
mobilizes people against and not for', creates typically for itself a modern
sense of pervasive guilt for not being radical enough (The Journals of Fr
Alexander Schmemann, p.203). But the Church is just life in the new world which
is the old one transfigured in Christ's light. The Church does not have to be
defined by its activism, justified by its good causes. 'Dead end of the world
with its "progress." Dead end of religion with its laws and therapeutics. Christ
has taken us out of both these dead ends. The Church eternally celebrates it,
and people as eternally reject it and are deaf to it' (p.292). So if we ask what
we need to be heard saying, perhaps it is this - that the new world is a reality
here in the Church, not by our activism and our a!
nxious struggles to keep up with an agenda, but in the gift of presence in the
Eucharist and in every moment when we meet our Father through Jesus. The
possibility of a world differently organised, where poverty and wealth, joy and
suffering, are everyone's, a world where every person is not just a possessor of
'rights' but a precious and unique friend. That possibility is a fact among us.
It may and will move us to action, to the fullest share in the struggle to
change things; but the Church is not there in order to change things - if it
were, it would disappear when injustices disappear, instead of being fully
itself when injustices disappear. When we start defining the Church by campaigns
and struggles, God help us; we have lost the one thing only the Church can give,
the fact of God's future made real. That is why Father Schmemann can say that
our biggest problem as a Church is that we have lost joy (291); and this is not
because we fail to feel or look happy enough, whi!
ch really has nothing at all to do with anything and could be the most
of the world. It is about the fact that joy exists, that God's blissful
enjoyment of his own loving being is open to the world he has created. Will this
week's proceedings suggest to anyone that joy exists and is offered us by God?
V
We can't guarantee anything at this point. We can't ignore the seriousness of
what divides us. But if there is no easy solution, and there is not, we can at
least think about this simple suggestion. If it is difficult for us to stand
together at the Lord's Table as we might wish, can we continue to be friends?
Its sounds so weak, doesn't? But, I actually think it is of great significance.
It is a way of saying that we do not know how to go on being visibly full
brothers and sisters, that we can find no clear visible way of expressing any
sense of being together in the Body of Christ. But this is the case already with
a number of other Christian bodies, and several other Christian bodies view us
in this way, notably the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches. And yet we
maintain respect and often something more than respect. Friendship in Christ, it
seems, is possible even when sacramental communion isn't.
Friendship is something that creates equality and mutuality, not a reward for
finding equality or a way of intensifying existing mutuality. That's why we can
talk - astonishingly, when you think about it - of friendship between us and
God, the friendship Jesus speaks of. It is why St Teresa of Avila can write
about friendship as the most radical mark of Christian community, as we find our
common ground simply in God's invitation to us to be his friends. And so,
alongside the wearisome and saddening divisions of the Church, common ground
stubbornly persists.
What are we prepared to do to nourish this sort of friendship? My sense of where
we now are is that this is not high on our agenda. The debates are so close to
us, so emotionally involving, that we can hardly conceive of being friends in
Christ. Yet it may be that many of our difficulties have their roots in a
failure to give enough energy to friendship in the past across cultures and
theologies. If we can correct this, we at least lay some foundations for the
reconciliation that we shall have to go on praying for, though who knows how or
when it will happen? Friendship in Christ is a willingness to share prayer, to
listen without rancour to each another, to respect and even enjoy difference, to
be patient with each other, not expecting quick healing of divisions but not
walking away every time difference raises its head. Friendship in Christ is best
and most creative when it is linked with sacramental fellowship; but if that
fellowship is hard or controversial, we need to r!
emember from our ecumenical experience that this need not and should not mean a
spirit of bitter contempt towards each other. It has taken the great churches of
the world centuries to make this sort of friendship a routine matter, but, thank
God, it is so now for the most part. Can we make a resolution - not pass but
make a resolution -- that it will not take so long to confirm these bonds
between us? Of course it is harder in some ways: direct conflict and even
rivalry darkens the sky so much. But when we cannot witness together as fully as
we long to do, this is something of real witness nonetheless. We can look at and
listen to the language we use about each other and watch how easily we are ready
to let it slip from proper and honest disagreement towards contempt and mutual
exclusion. Yet as baptised believers, we still have something to offer each
other; and the friendship of the baptised should remain, whatever else divides.
And it may be that as we work on what our friendship through Christ and in
Christ's presence demands, we shall find ourselves able to step back from things
that make our divisions deeper, we shall find ways of relating to each other
with respect and integrity that stop any of us pushing a local agenda too far
and too fast (and I am not speaking only of one issue or one locality here). We
already see signs of this in some places. Who knows what might be possible for
us with patience and - simply - love?
VI
While I have been speaking, on a conservative estimate, twelve hundred children
have died of poverty-related causes. By the end of our meeting, the number will
be some 300,000. I say this not to induce guilt, but to remind us again of the
world in which we have to speak, the world in which we have to make the good
news sound credible. Too often, even when we speak of things we know we can't
avoid speaking about - some of the things I have touched on here - we must
surely realise that we sound as though we lived in a quite unreal world, where
the passions that moved us made no sense to most people. We can remedy this not
by ignoring the need for honest talk among ourselves but by resolutely bringing
all our speaking back to the fact of what we have been given, which is finally
so infinitely more important than our debates - the fact that God's future is
real now because of the cross and resurrection of Jesus and the coming of the
Holy Spirit. In that context, as we struggle t!
o find ways of understanding and responding to each other that are in every way
and every sense faithful to the gospel, let us at least try to remember what a
church is and what the nature of a church requires of us - that it is not a
pressure group of right or left. If we treat it like that, we fall under Karl
Barth's heavy strictures, acting as if the secret of God were ours. We shall not
manifest to the world anything other than a religious version of the world's own
quarrels and tensions. And if we are not showing the triumphant work of Christ,
we are saying to the world that we have no real word to speak that the world
doesn't know already; we are just echoing the anger or the compassion or the
generosity of the human heart. And there are worse things than that; but Christ
did not die and rise for that.
If this time together can be a true experience of the Church, what may not be
possible for us by God's grace? We shall have found again the sources from which
we can confront the deep evils of our world with resolution and passion. We may
be just a little less likely to seem an embarrassing, even insulting, set of
noises off in a time when serious moral attention is on those evils and how they
are to be ended. What, I wonder, do we imagine God saying to us at the end of
things? Not, I think, 'Did you successfully negotiate the structural and ethical
problems of the Anglican Communion?' but perhaps, 'Did you so live in the
experience of the Church, the Body of my Son, that a tormented world saw the
possibility of hope and of joy?' 'Did you focus afresh on the one task the
Church has to perform - living Christ in such a way that his news, his call, is
compelling?' The Orthodox Church at its Liturgy prays for 'a good answer before
the terrible judgement seat of Christ'; we might well pray the same, as we pray
for the wisdom to know how to speak to each other in this meeting so that we
speak at the same time to the world Christ loves and longs for.
ENDS
© Rowan Williams 2005
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