The former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams says he once considered becoming a Catholic.
He also admits in an interview with Premier Christian Radio that he finds the Anglican Church "constantly exasperating".
It was the desire to become a monk that made him consider joining the
Catholic fold but he was "brought back again and again to the fact
that, well, this is where God put you".
"Don't go looking for a perfect church, don't go looking for an ideal
church – the one you'd invent if you had the choice. Just inhabit the
place where God has put you," he says during the interview.
He also considered joining the Orthodox Church after attending a
Russian Orthodox liturgy where he was "overwhelmed by the experience of
beauty, worship, mystery and excitement".
"But I couldn't quite cope with the idea that you had to uproot
yourself culturally. Although the Anglican Church is constantly
exasperating, I just found 'that's the church'," he says.
In the interview, Dr Williams talked about his involvement in
community projects as a student and how he was at one point undecided
over becoming a social worker or a priest.
"But I think I recognised that would be saying 'no' to quite a bit of
what energised me and going forward for ordination and theological
study wasn't saying 'no' to all the concerns about community and
justice," he says.