OUR
ANGLICAN FUTURE
An
address by the Bishop of Chester, the Right Reverend Dr Peter Forster,
to the Chester Diocesan Evangelical Fellowship, given in Chester on
Wednesday, 23 February, 2005
I
VERY MUCH WELCOME the opportunity to address the Diocesan
Evangelical Fellowship, at what is recognised to be a particularly
significant time in the life of the Church of England, and the wider
Anglican Communion. I also think it is a very important juncture
in the relationship between Europe, and the European nations, and all
the Churches.
This said, I am often struck by a relative calm, a
relative sense of peace, in the day to day life of the Diocese.
Most clergy and parishes focus purposefully upon the task in hand, in
a positive and usually cheerful way, aware no doubt of large and
looming issues, but not distracted unduly by them. We can all
take heart that whatever readjustments may, or may not, take place in
particular institutional arrangements within or between denominations,
as far as the Church is the Body of Christ it is entirely secure
against even the gates of hell. All that we do in our
ministries, and work, we do for Jesus Christ, and only subsequently or
secondarily for the Church of England, the Diocese of Chester, or our
own parish and PCC.
That said, I am an Anglican, a member of the Church
of England, Bishop of this Diocese. I love this Church : not, I
hope, more than I love the Lord my God, but I am very attached to it.
The Church of England was the place of my conversion, the Church which
has largely nurtured my faith. I owe it a very great deal
indeed. I don’t want to be drawn into the all too fashionable
trend today for folk to sit loose to the communities, or institutions,
which have nurtured them, and to which they belong. Ours is the
age of the individual, with his or her choices, rights, preferences
and needs. At worst, and not uncommonly, it degenerates into the
narcissism of ‘believe what you like and it’s true for you’, an
idolatry of oneself.
We certainly stand as individuals before the God
who knocks personally at the door of our lives. We enter through
the narrow gate, or not at all. Indeed, it can be claimed that
the modern emphasis upon the individual is derived from the Judaeo-Christian understanding of creation. We are uniquely
drawn from the dust of the earth, and our bodies give us clearly
distinguishable, separate existences. We are not at heart a
pre-existent soul, which has separated off from an original spiritual
conglomerate, and which perhaps has already indwelt numerous other
bodies. We are irreducibly who we are, individual persons.
Yet precisely as such, the biblical accounts of
creation relate us intimately both to God and to our fellow human
beings. It is by God’s Spirit that the breath of life is
breathed into us : Eve is taken from Adam’s ribs. And so, as
Christians, we cannot imagine, or understand ourselves, apart from
being members of Christ’s Body here on earth. Our independence
and our interdependence are intrinsic to each other, just as in
creation at large. God both gives creation its own proper
separate and independent existence, yet also each moment upholds the
universe by his Word of Power.
I think we need to acknowledge that Protestants
have tended to rest too easily in an over-spiritualised view of the
Church, pushing too far the proper Reformation distinction between the
visible and invisible Church. In the Bible the Spirit of God
likes bodies : our bodies, the national community of Israel, the
Temple at Jerusalem, above all the incarnate Christ, then the Church,
and indeed the body, the ‘corpus’, of Holy Scripture.
There are always two sides: the physical and the
spiritual, and it is all too easy to distort the proper balance and
relationship between them. Solomon’s prayer of dedication of
the Temple in Jerusalem well expresses both the promise that
‘God’s name shall be there’, and the necessary qualification
‘But will God indeed dwell on earth? Behold, heaven and the
highest heaven cannot contain thee; how much less this house which I
have built’.
The Protestant tendency to emphasise the spiritual
aspect of the Church was partly encouraged by a certain reliance upon
Platonic categories of thought in the Reformed tradition. In the
modern age it has been powerfully reinforced by contemporary
individualism, and the result has been a considerable neglect of the
doctrine of the Church, in both the broader Protestant tradition, and
also to a significant degree in evangelicalism.
Many others have commented in similar terms in
recent years, and the point was memorably made by Archbishop Robert
Runcie when he addressed NEAC in 1987. More recently, and from a
very different quarter, Cardinal Walter Kasper, the head of the Roman
Catholic Congregation for Christian Unity, has shrewdly remarked that
the Protestant tradition has tended to see Jesus Christ too much as
simply Head of the Church, and insufficiently as present in it.
It is against the background of these
considerations that I want to make some suggestions about the
underlying issues which currently face the Church of England and the
Anglican Communion. I would like to group my comments under the
four headings which are provided by the classic statement of Anglican
identity, the Lambeth Quadrilateral of Scripture, the historic creeds,
the sacraments, and the historic ministry.
Scripture
I regard the existence of the Bible as a
fundamental bulwark against error and false teaching. It has a
wonderful givenness in the place of the Church. For all that
Holy Scripture has been dissected,
criticised, analysed, torn to
pieces, portrayed as muddled, contradictory, or plain wrong; for
all that it has been practically ignored to the point that many
Christians no longer read it; for all that many clever attempts
are made to turn its teaching upside down or inside out, the text
remains, and confronts the Church. There is no serious attempt
to revise its content: to add this book, to subtract that one.
For essential purposes the body of Holy Scripture is ecumenically
agreed. Some may make rather snide comments about St Paul, or
whoever, but these books and writings, gathered together in the
Christian Bible, retain an objective pole position.
Recent significant Anglican documents make this
quite clear. The contemporary Windsor Report states:
‘The Anglican Communion has always declared that
its supreme authority is scripture’ (p.33)
Scripture is to be ‘a focus and means of unity’
(p.38)
It ‘has always been at the centre of Anglican
belief and life’ (p.38)
‘The message of Scripture, as a whole and in its
several parts, must be preached and taught in all possible and
appropriate ways’ (p.40)
‘The authority of bishops cannot reside solely or
primarily in legal structures, but in their ministry of “prayer and
the Word of God” (Acts 6 v 4)’ (p.41)
The Windsor Report continues:
‘The current crisis thus constitutes a call to
the whole Anglican Communion to re-evaluate the ways in which we have
read, heard, studied and digested scripture’. (p.42)
These statements are heartening, although we need
to acknowledge a considerable gulf between such aspirations and the
reality of wide stretches of church life. As I go around the
Diocese, spending each Sunday in one or more of its 360+ centres of
worship, I am often saddened by the inattention with which the Bible
is read in worship. Only rarely, I am tempted to say, do I gain
the impression that the person reading the Scriptures actually
believes that what is being read means something. Perhaps
that’s a bid hard, but we urgently need to recover for the Bible a
true place of honour in the life of the Church. We have become
so used to treating it more or less like any other book, not least in
the way it is printed and bound, so used to hearing about its human
dimension, that we have lost sight of the way it acts as a primary and
unique witness to God’s definitive revelation of himself. Yes,
revelation: actual, real, down-to-earth revelation. The light
shone in the darkness 2000 years ago, and it only enlightens every
person who has come and comes into the world because it shone there
and then.
The primacy of Scripture rests upon an
acknowledgement that God chose to reveal himself through his dealings
with the people of Israel, culminating in the birth, life, death and
resurrection of Israel’s Messiah. As Christians we are grafted
into that vine, into that story, we acknowledge and
embrace that revelation. God may continue to reveal
himself to our conscience, and in history, in a myriad of ways, but we
will only distinguish God’s voice from other, false voices if our
ears are first tuned into the Scriptural witness to God’s
revelation.
So the first foundation for the future of
Anglicanism will need to be a more serious attention to the
authoritative place of Holy Scripture. At key moments in the
life of the Church, it has been a renewed hearing of the Holy
Scripture which has been crucial. It will surely be so again.
The
Historic Creeds
Let me develop this theme by looking at the second
leg upon which the Lambeth Quadrilateral stands, the historic, or
catholic, creeds.
I note that the number of occasions upon which I
recite the Nicene or Apostles Creeds in Church has much diminished
since the advent of Common Worship. I’m not necessarily
opposed to the use of shorter and simpler statements of faith, but I
do fear that if their use becomes too widespread then this will simply
become another example of the dumbing down of Christian expression and
belief.
The Anglican Reformation set out primarily to
restore the ancient catholic face of the Church, to recover the
vitality and authenticity of the life of the Church in the early
centuries. But when studying the Church in the patristic period
one is soon aware that these were centuries when the life of the
Church was substantially devoted to hammering out the details of the
Nicene and Apostles Creeds in particular. The theology of the
foundational centuries of the life of the Church is fundamentally the
theology of those creeds. We may wish to approach this through
later reflection, and in particular the theology of the Anglican or
Reformed tradition, but the later theology is intrinsically grounded
in the theology of the patristic period. That becomes very
obvious when we read such classic texts as Hooker’s Laws of
Ecclesiastical Polity, or Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian
Religion.
So I pose the question: what is the state of
the study of classical Christian doctrine in today’s Church?
I’m afraid that only a rather pessimistic reply is possible.
University courses in theology typically spend much less time upon
classic Christian doctrine, and it is often taught in a manner which
is somewhat detached from the worshipping life of the Church which
formed the actual context of patristic theology. For all the
valiant efforts which are made by those who teach on our ordination
training courses and in our theological colleges, I do not gain the
impression that sufficiently detailed attention is usually paid to
fundamental doctrinal theology.
Again, without wishing to make cheap criticisms, I
often have a rather dilettante impression of much contemporary
theological education. This was brought home to me when
organising a book group for curates. I chose a collection of
Charles Cranfield’s essays on the Epistle to the Romans, some of
which included reference to what I foolishly thought were well-known
Greek words such as Logos, Nomos, Pistis. When the group of
around 10 curates met with me I discovered that most of them had never
encountered a Greek word in their theological training. I had
assumed that anyone spending two or three years on a regional Course,
or two years at a residential College, would at least have been taught
how to recognise simple Greek words, and to use a commentary which
referred to transliterated Greek words.
Now, I recognise the dangers in making theological
training too academic, and I am an advocate (and practitioner) of
flexible approaches to theological training for older NSM candidates
in particular. But that flexibility in relation to older
candidates, which I believe the contemporary missionary needs of the
Church requires, does rely upon the foundation of a more rigorous and
in depth training for those who enter full-time ministry.
Christian ministry needs firm and secure theological foundations.
Our Anglican future, whatever form or forms it
might take, must be a future which recaptures a theological
seriousness which I judge to have been significantly lost. It
needs to be a future which concentrates more on the substance and
content of the Christian faith, and is less obsessed with the
questions of theological method which have so dominated
twentieth-century theology. The central message from the African
Church to the Western Churches at the present time is that we are
accommodating too much to an increasingly secular culture. But
how will we resist this, without a clear and widely held appreciation
of the distinct teaching of the Gospel?
The collapse of the Anglican catechetical tradition
illustrates what I have been saying. The BCP included a
Catechism which was described as ‘An Instruction to be learned of
every person before he be brought to be confirmed by the Bishop’.
It included the Apostles Creed, which was to be learnt by heart.
Have we not drifted much too far from such requirements?
Let me conclude this section by suggesting that the
contemporary ignorance of the Bible and the Creeds in the Church go
together. It is no accident that the process by which the Creeds
and Canon were agreed took approximately the same length of time until
their more-or-less final determinations in the fourth century.
The formation of the Canon took a certain lead, when we compare stages
of development by the late second century, but the process was
symbiotic. The Church needed the Rule of Faith in order to
provide wisdom and guidance in the reading of the Scriptures, just as
much later Calvin was to offer his Institutes in the service of the
interpretation of the Bible in the Church.
In short, we won’t recover a proper dignity for
the Bible apart from the parallel recovery of the proper dignity of
the Creeds, and the classical Christian theology for which they stand.
The Sacraments
I turn to the third leg of the quadrilateral, the
sacraments of baptism and holy communion. Why was their
inclusion regarded as important in the recognition of Anglican
identity?
It has often been remarked that Anglicans have
given a particular prominence to our public worship in our
self-understanding. Provided that is not used as a pretext,
inadvertent or otherwise, for a neglect of the proper study of the
Bible and the Creeds, I am happy with an understanding of Anglican
identity which is firmly rooted in its worship.
For very many years, I have been a member of the
Prayer Book Society, mainly because of a sense of regret, perhaps
grief, at the widespread neglect of the BCP in the contemporary Church
of England. I have never argued for the essential superiority of
the BCP over newer forms of service, and I am happy to embrace both
with an open mind concerning which form of service might be right for
a particular service or occasion. However, I have been surprised
at the number of parishes in the Diocese which make no use of the BCP,
and I wonder about the wisdom in this. Just recently an
incumbent who had been appointed to a parish in the Diocese told me
that (s)he had reintroduced an 8am Sunday Communion using the BCP, and
a new congregation of around a dozen people had appeared: a fresh
expression of being Church, to use the jargon. I recall from my
days at Beverley Minster inheriting an 8am said Communion, which
alternated between the modern language ASB and the BCP. Between
20 and 25 people were there each week, drawn from a pool of around 40.
After two or three years I surveyed their opinion: would they
prefer more BCP or ASB, or perhaps the traditional language of Rite B
but in a modern shape? The response was that 90% of folk wanted
the BCP each week! They had accepted the ASB under sufferance,
at the insistence of a previous Vicar. I was able to put them
out of their misery.
Similarly
with weddings, I inherited a policy of only giving couples the ASB
service, but I decided to offer a choice. I read the vows etc in
both old and new language, and left the couple to choose the language
in which they would express their life commitment. After all,
they would be the prime participants in the service; they would
actually marry each other, and my role was to solemnise their marriage
in Church. About half chose the old, and half the new language.
I was, of course, offering the Series I / 1928 version, rather than
the less satisfactory 1662.
How many clergy today offer couples the same
choice, offered neutrally as their choice?
The neglect of the BCP in the Church of England
today can be illustrated by cross-referencing the membership of
General Synod with that of the Prayer Book Society. Only 17 out
of more than 500 members of General Synod are members of the Prayer
Book Society. Well, perhaps one shouldn’t make too much of
that, because there shouldn’t really be a need for a Prayer Book
Society in a Church which originally was a Prayer Book Society.
I
recognise that there are complex questions about worship, mission and
culture, and I have no desire to see an inappropriate return to the
BCP itself. But I do think that the neglect of the Prayer Book
has gone hand in hand with a certain neglect of the seriousness and
dignity of our worship. Do we prepare ourselves for worship as
we should, and as previous generations often did? I recently
visited someone who for 50 years had read on Saturday evening the BCP
readings for the following morning’s service. This had been
dislocated by a decision (without consultation) to replace the BCP
readings with those from a modern lectionary. As I go around the
Diocese I am usually struck by a rather inattentive hubbub before a
service begins. Do we lead our folk to expect a special
encounter with God in our corporate worship? Do we expect that
for ourselves?
Why does the Lambeth Quadrilateral refer
specifically to the sacraments, rather than also to the preaching of
the Word, or more generally to the worship of the Church? I
suspect this is because the sacraments portray visibly the real
presence of God to and in his Church. We are baptised into the
death and resurrection of Christ; we are invited to eat his body
and drink his blood. Of course there is a theological nuancing
required, as we seek to understand the nature of our participation in
Christ, but there is a pretty down-to-earth realism across a range of
New Testament statements, from the language of participation in Christ
in St John’s Gospel to such Pauline statements as ‘I live, yet not
I, but Christ lives in me’.
The mystery of our life is that we are invited to
be part of God’s life, while remaining rooted in his distinct
creation. The Christian life is an invitation to participate in
God’s life, as sons and daughters of God by adoption. Just as
human parents who adopt make it a first rule to treat all their
children the same, whether they are natural by birth or adopted,
should we doubt that God values us, as his adopted children, as much
as he values Jesus Christ his eternal Son? That may sound a
startling claim, and clearly in some respects there is a clear
distinction between the uniquely incarnate Son of God and us, but have
we allowed that proper distinction to obscure the vivid NT language of
our participation in Christ? Beyond St John and St Paul, the
Second Epistle of Peter speaks of the promise that we might become
‘partakers of the divine nature’.
In our Anglican future I believe we need to
rediscover in renewed ways what it means to live a Christian life,
perhaps I should say the Christian life. We have become deeply
secularised in modern European Christianity: that, I believe, is
one lesson which we should draw from the current debates over human
sexuality. It is certainly the lesson which the African Church
has drawn.
So, my challenge, and hope, would be that we would
learn much better to live by God’s grace, to know that we live
intimately in his presence as indeed he lives in us. We could
start by taking with much deeper seriousness the symbolism and meaning
of Baptism and the Holy Communion, and preparation for their
administration. Both deserve much greater reverence than is
often found in today’s Church; they are places where, as with
Solomon’s prayer at the dedication of the Temple, God promises to be
present. They should be treated as royal occasions indeed, just
as Calvin and Cranmer taught and practised. Let the preaching
and teaching of the Church come from a general renewal of its prayer
and worship.
I shall add a footnote for this season of Lent.
Where is the practice and reality of penitence in today’s Church?
Is it not one consequence of a certain loss of the sense of God’s
personal presence that both personal and corporate penitential
activity has become largely perfunctory, if not completely absent.
I seem to attend more and more services which lack a general
confession, and curiously this includes both the modern confirmation
and ordination services. I am as guilty as anyone in this
neglect, but will the Church have a vibrant future without its
recovery?
The
Historic Episcopate
This final leg of the quadrilateral represents the
whole ordained ministry in its threefold order, gathered under an
episcopate which traces its existence, and in some senses its
authority, to the establishment of the first local churches by the
Apostles. Hence the traditional term, the historic or apostolic
ministry. Richard Hooker, in the classical phase of Anglican
theology, very clearly saw bishops as successors of the Apostles, and
charged with local oversight of the Churches.
Much ink, and not a little blood, has been spilt
over the understanding and place of the ordained ministry in the
Church. I would not wish to underestimate the complexity of the
issues, which present themselves in new forms in the Anglican
Communion at the present time, in relation to the acceptability of
ordained ministers who are either female, or have been involved in the
ordination of Gene Robinson as Bishop of New Hampshire.
Perhaps the first and most obvious, though easily
overlooked, thing to say is that the fact that so much controversy has
attended the theology of the ordained ministry is an indirect
testimony to its significance. (Perhaps the same can be said
about the theology of the sacraments, which likewise was a cause of so
much contention and bloodshed at the time of the Reformation).
It has often been a temptation for evangelicals, and those in the
Protestant tradition generally, to regard the existence and character
of the ordained ministry as essentially a second order issue. In
some respects perhaps it is, but the controversies return to haunt us,
and at the present time in a particularly sharp way. Yes, the
priesthood of the whole Church expressed through baptism must be the
primary and controlling reality, but just as we have too quickly
lapsed into a mainly spiritual conception of the Church, so we have
too readily sat loose to the responsibilities which the Lord gives to
his Church. ‘He who hears you, hears me’. (Luke 10 v 16).
‘If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you
retain the sins of any, they are retained’. (John 20 v 23).
Such are the consequences of the Church’s participation by grace in
the life and work of God.
Such sayings can be related fundamentally to the
whole Church, although in their original settings they are directed to
the apostolic group, and in Matthew 16 to St Peter alone. But
even if they are related to the whole Church, a particular
responsibility falls upon those who have special responsibility for
guarding and guiding the life of the Church as one, holy, catholic and
apostolic, that is, the ordained ministry.
Paradoxically, I think it is the very invisibility
of God which heightens the significance of the particular instruments
and institutions through which he chooses to work. Precisely
because we have an essential freedom before God we are given the
responsibilities which we cannot evade, as his ‘co-workers’ (1 Cor
3 v 9). In their own day, and in their own more limited way,
they are the modern equivalents of the responsibilities which St Paul
and the other apostles acknowledge on the pages of the New Testament.
Recall how St Paul repeatedly stresses the divine call of his
apostleship, ‘by the will of God’ – not ‘from men nor through
man’. It is this sense of a special call which is at the heart
of the ordained ministry, and which can so often be experienced as a
burden – who is sufficient for these things?
I often think of the passage from 2 Corinthians,
when St Paul rehearses a litany of his trials and tribulations, from
beatings, imprisonments, shipwrecks, hunger and thirst, and multitude
dangers of persecution unto death, and then adds ‘apart from other
things, there is the daily pressure upon me of anxiety for all the
churches’ (2 Cor 11 v 28).
It is against the background of this high calling
of the ordained ministry that we must set current discussions over the
standards of life which are to be expected of ordained clergy, and
whether and when the orders of ministry should be opened to women.
We should not be in the least surprised if they turn out to be highly
contentious issues, where compromise seems all but impossible.
Let me comment briefly upon both issues, although
they are not the prime focus of my address this evening.
In relation to the on-going reception of women as
priests or presbyters, and the possibility of their ordination as
bishops, the keynote for me needs to be patience. Although I did
not have a vote in 1992, I would have voted for the measure which
permitted the ordination of women as priests/presbyters. Over
the past 10 years or so I have seen a substantial release of gifts in
the life of the Church, and I see little sign of a discernment that it
was all a mistake. But 10 years is not long, and there is the
major ecumenical aspect given the reluctance of the Roman Catholic or
Orthodox Churches even to discuss the matter. It does not help
the situation that the running in this matter has been made by
Churches which are generally associated with the decadent West, and
with a society which exhibits a widespread sexual chaos.
To ordain women as bishops would, in my present
view, be to make a statement about the reception of women in the
ordained ministry which cannot yet be made. When the question of
the ordination of women as priests was decided, I judged that if a
two-thirds majority could be achieved in each House of the General
Synod, it would indicate an underlying acceptance in the Church of
around 75%. If and when we face the same question over the
ordination of women as bishops, although the legally required
majorities will also be two-thirds in each House, overall I would look
for around a 90% level of acceptance in the Church, which I do not
believe yet exists. I think we need to be patient, to listen
carefully and prayerfully to what God is saying to the Church in this
matter.
The Windsor Report addresses the question of
whether and in what sense the Anglican Communion wishes to be a
Church, rather than an increasingly loose federation of individual
churches. It has become clear that while we have often proceeded
on the basis that the Anglican Communion was a world wide Church, it
has not established that as a reality. If we wish to establish a
more real ecclesial coherence to Anglicanism as a whole, some hard
thinking, and difficult decisions lie before us, and not least in
relation to the future role of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
The
presenting issue has been the ordination of Gene Robinson as Bishop of
New Hampshire, and the authorisation of formal ecclesial services of
blessing of same-sex relationships in the North American Church.
The key question for me concerns the status of these issues: why are
they perceived to be of such significance? My own answer to that
question relates to the special place of marriage, both as the
generally best context for the raising of children and as a Scriptural
model of God’s relationship to the world. In that light I am
as cautious about a reinterpretation of Christian norms in relation to
heterosexual relationships outside marriage as I am to sexually active
same-sex relationships. I regret that the spotlight so often
falls upon the homosexual dimension, which I believe is a form of
corporate scape-goating by the heterosexual community. While I
regard the Windsor Report as in many respects an admirable document,
within its scope, I like least the singling out of Gene Robinson.
Why should he be barred from the next Lambeth Conference while those
bishops who consecrated him are to be invited?
I could have said more about the issue of women in
the ordained ministry, the controversy over human sexuality, and the
wider reflections in the Windsor Report. Perhaps we shall return
to these matters in the question time. In their different ways
each issue, or set of issues, points up the high place of the ordained
ministry in the life of the Church. This has often been obscured
amid a false clericalism which still afflicts the Church in the West,
but the answer will not be to sit loose to the pivotal role which the
ordained ministry will play in whatever Anglican future awaits us.
On the contrary, we have to learn anew and afresh what its true role
is in the life of the Church.
Let me try to sum up what I have been saying across
the four aspects of the Lambeth Quadrilateral: the future of
Anglicanism must surely lie in digging deeper into the foundations
upon which the Church of England, and the Anglican tradition, has been
built. We need, in a proper sense, to become more Anglican, by
more effectively rediscovering the ancient catholic face of the
Church. I very much hope that the future will bring a deepening
ecumenical rapprochement, and indeed full visible unity with other
denominations, but the only route to that is the same journey deeper
into our heritage in Scripture, the creeds, the worship of the Church,
and a common, universal ministry.
I
sometimes liken the four legs of the Lambeth Quadrilateral to four
corner flags of a sports pitch. They set out the boundaries and
the rules which are intended to allow the game to proceed with
fluency, skill, creativity, and spontaneity. That is my vision
for the future. There are lots of questions which will arise as
the Church continues its journey through history to the revelation of
God’s ultimate plans and purposes, questions around the shape of
Church life and much more. I firmly believe that God will give
us the resources to answer all those questions, provided we keep the
play on the pitch itself. The pillars of our Anglican tradition
are there that we might indeed ‘seek first the Kingdom of God’,
that all other things should be added unto us.