The archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has told gay magazine PinkNews it
was “great” that parliament had passed the measure he opposed, leaving
his aides scrambling to explain that all he meant was it was great that
parliament can and does pass laws. Welby, who campaigned and voted
against gay marriage last year, remains opposed both to gay marriage and
homophobia, his office explained.
This spin is probably justified. Welby has an impetuous and
enthusiastic manner when talking informally. He certainly would not want
to announce a change of position or policy without careful preparation
to minimise the resulting split. There is not even any hard evidence
that he is himself changing his mind on the substantive issue. But there
are increasing signs that the official line cannot hold for much
longer. Pressure is building from both supporters and opponents of gay
marriage.
Last month, Canon Jeremy Pemberton became
the first priest in the Church of England to defy the House of Bishops
and marry his same-sex partner. There will undoubtedly be others, and it
is still not clear how they can be disciplined. On the traditionalist
side, one of the most prominent and successful independent church
leaders, the Rev Steve Chalke, has been thrown out of the Evangelical
Alliance, a group that claims to represent 2 million Christians inside
and outside the Church of England, as a result of his support for equal
marriage and gay rights.
African
Anglican churches have already demanded that Pemberton and priests who
follow his example be disciplined. Conservative evangelicals have
established a sort of Church of England in exile whose bridgehead is a
church in south London, which is run by one of Welby’s mentors in the
church. The threat of a formal schism spreading to England remains.
But the logic of Welby’s own position is moving him away from the
certainties of his youth. The more he denounces homophobia, the more
difficult it becomes for him to defend discrimination against gay people
within the church. He opened this week with a rousing denunciation of
homophobic bullying in church schools but within days his office was
explaining that this is simply because he is opposed to all bullying, on
any grounds.
Meanwhile, Conservatives don’t see anything wrong with homophobia
except perhaps the word itself. The churches in Nigeria and Uganda have
recently passed laws that criminalise even the advocacy of same-sex
relationships. In the case of Uganda, they provide for life imprisonment
for “aggravated homosexuality”. They cling to a resolution passed by a
gathering of Anglican bishops from around the world in 1998 that
condemned “unjustified discrimination against homosexuals”, but it is
difficult to imagine any discrimination that some of them would not now
consider justified.
Just to make the archbishop’s troubles worse, he has now been publicly supported by Nick Clegg, who told PinkNews that
“Love is equal in the eyes of British law, but that right was hard won.
We have to fight even harder for universal human rights, including LGBT
freedoms, globally.” He is unlikely to announce that he now agrees with
Clegg.
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