Bishop of Gloucester would like a woman to be Archbishop of Canterbury

The first female bishop to take a seat in the House of Lords has said she would like a woman to be Archbishop of Canterbury. The Bishop of Gloucester, the Rt Rev Rachel Treweek, said "ideally" she would like a female to lead the world's Anglicans in the future.

Western Daily Press. 26 October 2015

 

1 thought on “Bishop of Gloucester would like a woman to be Archbishop of Canterbury”

  1. C.S Lewis’ essay ‘Priestesses in the Church?’ (1948) is written from an Anglo-Catholic point of view. I don’t agree with everything it says but I do agree with the closing observations, which contain a prophetic warning:

    “And this parallel between the Church and the Ball is not so fanciful as some would think. The Church ought to be more like a Ball than it is like a factory or a political party. Or, to speak more strictly, they are at the circumference and the Church at the Centre and the Ball comes in between. The factory and the political party are artificial creations – “a breath can make them as a breath has made”. In them we are not dealing with human beings in their concrete entirety only with “hands” or voters. I am not of course using “artificial” in any derogatory sense. Such artifices are necessary: but because they are our artifices we are free to shuffle, scrap and experiment as we please. But the Ball exists to stylize something which is natural and which concerns human beings in their entirety-namely, courtship. We cannot shuffle or tamper so much. With the Church, we are farther in: for there we are dealing with male and female not merely as facts of nature but as the live and awful shadows of realities utterly beyond our control and largely beyond our direct knowledge. Or rather, we are not dealing with them but (as we shall soon learn if we meddle) they are dealing with us”.

    Phil Almond

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