The Lambeth talk
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Dr. Rowan Williams. Photo:
Church of Wales |
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It is sometimes the crises and the pains that open up the holy in
a way that success doesnt. When you face failures and difficult questions
you have to ask, "If Im not the answer then who or what is?
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Dr
Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Wales is to be the new Archbishop of Canterbury.
His many supporters describe him as intellectual, radical and holy.
Before he was announced, Rowan Williams took part in an open question and answer
session with Festival goers at Greenbelt 2000. The edited interview material below
appears with the Festivals permission. Rowan
Williams on
The Church and State at present
The State link as it exists at the moment is not good for the Church. I think
it encourages a level of self-deception in the Church about how important it is,
which in the long run may raise some sort of issue about credibility and integrity.
It made sense once, when you could take for granted that the State was a religious
entity. If you dont believe that then it is a bit odd to still have this
relic. I also think that the notion of the Monarch as supreme Governor has outlived
its usefulness. Rowan Williams on
Church
and State in the future I think that what will happen is disestablishment
by a thousand cuts partly because Establishment isnt one thing but
a whole bundle of legal conventions which you cant abolish by a single act
of Parliament. They tried it with Wales in 1920, and it was a mess, actually.
But I think that at least within the next 15 years the Church of England will
look a lot more like the Church of Scotland. Rowan Williams on
The Simpsons Here is a show that knows
what its doing, using cultural icons and subverting them and turning them
on their heads. Its unsentimental most of the time and doesnt go for
easy answers. At the same time it is profoundly affirmative of failure, forgiveness,
not taking yourself seriously, challenging mythologies and clichés, knowing
where you are culturally yet not being imprisoned by it. Its very good on
the subject of religion: Reverend Lovejoy is one of my favourite characters and
I think Ned Flanders must have done more for atheism than any fictional character
in the contemporary world! But its that awareness of the idiocy and the
failure of religious cliché that I like about it. I also like it because
its funny, never mind the theology! Rowan Williams on
Personal spiritual development The most
important spiritual inspirations for me have come from St. John of the Cross,
because of that sense of what you dont see in the process of your growth.
Its a very dark passage. Occasionally, he says, you get a glimpse like a
spark flaring up from a deeply buried fire. Just for a second you think this
actually might be real, and then its back to normal and a lot of brick
walls, a sense of treading water and the only thing that gives you any sense that
its real is that you are still doing it somehow. Why do I pray? Well because
I did it yesterday and somehow that helped me to be here today; but I dont
know how. Rowan Williams on
Peace
For a very long time Ive seen the peace imperative as fundamental. I just
dont see how we can be easy with a situation where we are prepared to plan
cold-bloodedly for the obliteration of others in whom the image of God is alive.
Thats my bottom line on peace. The Churchs involvement in the arms-trade
is an agonizing situation. There is so much on that subject that is brushed under
the carpet, socially and ecclesiastically, in a way that I find heart-breaking.
Rowan
Williams on
Failure Shortly
after becoming a Bishop somebody asked what the biggest difference was. I said
that Ive really discovered you need to believe in God! It is sometimes the
crises and the pains that open up the holy in a way that success somehow doesnt
Because when you face failures and difficult questions you have to ask if
Im not the answer then who or what is? And the hope and the confidence
goes, not inwards, but towards God. Time and again you realize you are not what
you thought you were, not as good at these things and not necessarily the answer
to somebody elses problem. You know then (or hope you do) just to say sorry
to the people involved and to God and then you open yourself up to whatever God
has to give you. So I try to tell myself that its all right to fail, and
that God is God. Rowan Williams on
Evangelism
I cant see any way of being a Christian that doesnt involve you at
some point saying that it is in relation to Christ that human beings become as
human as they are meant to be. So I dont see any way of being a relativist
about Jesus Christ. In practice though, the Jesus Christ we may be trying to share
with someone of another faith or of no faith is inevitably the Jesus Christ of
our own imagination and understanding. So when people say no to that (or I dont
understand) is it Christ or is it us they are saying no to? We have to be very
cautious there. We need to communicate the mystery, the invitation and the
excitement of Jesus as best we can, in word and action and worship and more than
we have done before; then say OK youve got some time to let these
things sink in on your own terms. There doesnt need to be a simple
decision in the next thirty seconds; because this is a new world that takes some
time to feel your way into. When Evangelism does happen, people will find their
way in, bringing with them all sorts of very different bits of their world, which
we may find quite uncomfortable. So there is a need for an enormous amount of
patience in seeing where these different parts whether brought from youth
culture or from a Buddhist tradition fit in. |