After Justin Welby completes his official duties as Archbishop of Canterbury on January 6, there’s a lot more to put in place than a new Archbishop.
Welby's departure leaves more than a vacancy, it testifies to a multi-faceted crisis of leadership in the Church of England. Many have commented on his legacy, but I wish merely to observe that during his tenure, and especially at his resignation, a few long-festering narratives converged.
Safeguarding: rethinking oversight
Most prominent among those narratives is safeguarding. At a parish level, recent systemic advances in safeguarding have been necessarily demanding and quietly revolutionary. Yet, post-Makin, the emerging aspirations for safeguarding provision are straining at the existential fabric of the institution and all things associated with it. And that is because of the piercing focus on the practice of spiritual leadership in structures and in networks, the legacy of unchecked power and the abuse of such power.
Four myths about contending for truth in the CofE
For evangelicals in the Church of England, and especially those in full-time ministry, “contending for the faith” has become a …