The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin
Welby, has addressed the rise of far-right politics, the election of
President Trump and Britain’s decision to vote to leave the European
Union, in his presidential address at the start of the Church of
England’s General Synod.
Archbishop Justin said it was a time when the future offered a wider
range of opportunity, or of threat, than we have been used to
culturally, politically and economically: "There are a thousand ways to
explain the Brexit vote, or the election of President Trump, or the
strength in the polls in Holland of Geert Wilders or in France of Madame
Le Pen and many other leaders in a nationalist, populist, or even
fascist tradition of politics. Almost certainly there is no simple
explanation, almost certainly the impact of globalisation economically,
or marginalisation politically and of post-modernity culturally have
some role to some extent."
Archbishop Justin said these developments would be studied for years
to come but at present, “we are in the middle of it all and we see
neither the destination nor the road.”
However he also said it was a moment of potential opportunity and
challenge – but challenge that as a nation could be overcome with the
right practices, values, culture and spirit. He told Synod members that
for the Church, it was an extraordinary opportunity to be part of
reimagining a new Britain, its practices, values, aspirations and global
role: “We can be part of the answer, we have a voice and a contribution
and a capacity and a reach and above all a Lord who is faithful when we
fail and faithful when we flourish.”
Both Archbishop Justin and the Archbishop of York came out in favour
of the UK remaining in the European Union in the EU referendum last
year; he said that in the necessary reimagination of the country, the
church could not dictate but had to participate; “Participation means
being a listening, suffering and reconciling presence, not a hectoring,
self-interested one. The language of public life at present is deeply,
savagely divided and may become worse.”
He said the heritage of the Church of England is to be used
confidently, but not arrogantly: “We have at present the extraordinary
privilege of sitting in parliament, the remarkable gift and
responsibility of educating, chaplains in every sphere of life, and a
role in public life of the nation. We have a heritage of presence across
England, burdensome although it may sometimes be, and the vocation of
being the default point of help and support in times of trouble, or
celebration in times of joy.”
Archbishop Justin concluded by setting out the challenge for the
church: "In this time of a choice between national hope and opportunity
or threat and fear we may play the part to which we are called in
re-imagining our country and seizing the best future that lies before
us."