CONFLICT and God’s faithfulness within the face of its horrors were the important thing themes of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s address on the opening of the General Synod in Westminster on Friday afternoon.
Archbishop Welby began his presidential address by quoting the UN secretary-general, António Guterres: “The world is coming off its hinges.”
He referred to conflicts and consequent humanitarian crises in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Myanmar, in addition to tensions in Pakistan, the Philippines, Mozambique, and the Korean peninsula, and on the United States’ southern border.
“We live in a world of suffering,” he said, but within the face of such suffering, he suggested, the Church mustn’t draw back from its work, including its internal struggles.
He quoted the previous Bishop of Chichester George Bell, who, on the eve of the Second World War, said that, in times equivalent to these, the Church must be “much more the Church”.
“God doesn’t abandon his Church of today, wherever it wanders. He searches and finds and carries back,” the Archbishop said. “Suffering is normal, but God is faithful, and we’re called to be faithful people.”
Earlier this month, Archbishop Welby had quoted Bell in a gathering of church leaders in Kyiv, in the middle of a five-day pastoral visit to Ukraine (News, 14 February).
“In Europe, the Ukrainian-Russian war is frozen . . . and the suffering of the people in Ukraine is increased, not least since it has been replaced because the principal concern by the havoc and horror of the Levant, and all that is occurring in that area,” the Archbishop said on Friday, and referred to next Tuesday afternoon’s planned Synod debate on the war.
The absence of a comparable debate on Gaza was highlighted by protesters, standing outside Church House as Synod members arrived for the opening session there. The protesters criticised the Archbishop for not meeting the Revd Dr Munther Isaac, a Palestinian pastor currently visiting the UK from Bethlehem (News, 21 February).
Criticism of the Church and figures inside it was often vociferous, and “expressions of hatred” got here often from throughout the Church, Archbishop Welby said. “We have to assume one of the best reasonably than the worst,” he suggested. “Suffering and enemies are faced best in communities with trust across the divide reasonably than in self-protecting and reinforcing huddles.”
At the tip of his address, which was met with applause, Archbishop Welby presented the Canterbury Cross for services to the Church of England to the Church Commissioners’ chief investment officer, Tom Joy, who’s moving to a recent job overseas (Interview, 23 February; News, 19 January).