Monday, February 11, 2008

Address to the Opening of General Synod

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Photo of Dr Rowan Williams courtesy of The Guardian

THE GUARDIAN: 'The prevailing attitude … was one of heavy disagreement with a number of things which the [speaker] had not said.' Ronald Knox's description of discussion at a student society in the 1930s has a certain familiarity after the last few days; but given that public comment and criticism has been cast in such highly coloured terms, I've thought it right to say a few words to Synod this afternoon about what was and wasn't said last week and what the questions were which I had hoped might benefit from some airing.

Some of what has been heard is a very long way indeed from what was actually said in the Royal Courts of Justice last Thursday. But I must of course take responsibility for any unclarity in either that text or in the radio interview, and for any misleading choice of words that has helped to cause distress or misunderstanding among the public at large and especially among my fellow Christians.

It's Lent, and one of the great penitential phrases of the Psalms will be in all our minds – 'Who can tell how oft he offendeth? Cleanse thou me from my secret faults.' I'm deeply grateful to many of you for the support as well as the challenges I've received this weekend, and for your willingness to treat all this as a serious issue that deserves attention. But I believe quite strongly that it is not inappropriate for a pastor of the Church of England to address issues around the perceived concerns of other religious communities and to try and bring them into better public focus.

I hope anyway that you'll bear with me now if I pick up a couple of points that I think have been distorted in the discussion. The lecture was written as an opening contribution to a series on Islam and English Law… >>>

THE GUARDIAN:
Archbishop Defends His Sharia Remarks By Louise Radnofsky

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