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Archbishop Of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, Blasts U.K. Government Cuts

First Posted: 06/18/11 03:25 AM ET Updated: 08/17/11 06:12 AM ET

By Trevor Grundy
c. 2011 Religion News Service

CANTERBURY, England (RNS) Nearly a millennium ago, four unruly knights crossed the English Channel from France and confronted the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, over his feud with King Henry II.

Before the knights smashed the future saint's skull in front of monks at an altar inside Canterbury Cathedral, Henry is said to have wondered aloud, "Who shall rid me of this turbulent priest?"

These days, Prime Minister David Cameron might be wondering the same about the current archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams.

Williams sparked a political row by criticizing the government's austerity measures and budget cuts as the cause of "bafflement and indignation," saying they are nothing more than "radical, long-term policies for which no one voted."

To be sure, Williams' two most recent predecessors angered the governments of their day when Robert Runcie confronted Margaret Thatcher over budget cuts in the 1980s and George Carey blasted Britain's support for the war in Iraq.

But never have the words of a sitting archbishop of Canterbury caused quite so much anger as Williams' during his stint as guest editor of the left-leaning New Statesman magazine earlier this month.

The very public flap threw a spotlight on Williams' twin roles as head of the Church of England and also the 77 million-member worldwide Anglican Communion, and the difficulty of doing both.

If he wades into national politics, critics say he should instead return to ensuring his global flock doesn't break up over human sexuality. Yet if he ignores the politics of the day, he's criticized for not using his bully pulpit.

Less than two months after the media hailed him as a "national treasure" when he officiated at the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, Williams has become, in the words of the Sunday Times' Minette Marrin, a "wordy, holy, hairy man" who is "hustling his tiny flock towards the cliffs of disestablishment with the foolish, self-destructive recklessness of Don Quixote."

Former Times editor William Rees-Mogg was a tad more succinct in blasting Williams' critique of government spending cuts. Williams, he said, had shown a distinct lack of "Christian charity."

Writing in the New Statesman's June 9 issue, Williams questioned the value of the coalition government's reforms, and charged that Cameron's "Big Society" platform had been conceived for "opportunistic and money-saving reasons" and that its ideas were "painfully stale."

Taken aback by Williams' public critique, Cameron rejected Williams' views but nonetheless said he had every right to express them. For good measure, Britain's top Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop Vincent Nichols, sided with Cameron.

Williams has received support from some quarters of the church, including a handful of bishops and one retired priest, the Rev. John Papworth, who said, "Not only does the Archbishop of Canterbury have a right to engage in public debate, but it is also his duty."

Others in the Church of England have noted this is not the first time Williams stepped into the political arena.

He has condemned racism and advised voters not to support the far right-wing British National Party (BNP). In 1985, Williams was arrested during a protest organized by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament at a U.S. air base in Suffolk.

Williams comes from a tradition of activism in a poor part of Wales, and was born into a family of Presbyterians-turned-Anglicans who were steeped in a strain of Anglo-Catholicism.

By criticizing the current coalition government, Williams opened himself up to questions about his own leadership skills, both in the Church of England and the larger communion, where he has the power of persuasion, but little else.

Within the Anglican Communion, conservative Third World archbishops have blasted him -- and subsequently gone on to mostly ignore him -- for not disciplining the independent-minded U.S. Episcopalians and Canadian Anglicans for their embrace of homosexuality.

Western liberals, meanwhile, likewise ignored his pleas not to ordain openly gay bishops or bless same-sex unions, and rebuffed his plans for an Anglican "covenant" that would bind the communion's 44 member churches.

Williams, 61, has said that he would love to spend less time talking about homosexuality in order to concentrate on what he calls "the real issues" -- hunger, poverty and disease, especially in the developing world.

Yet when he does, as in the New Statesman article, conservative critics say he should spend more time healing the bruised Church of England and leave politics to the politicians.

Marrin, from the Sunday Times, said the incident reflected the church's unique role in governance of the state, and vice versa -- and not in a good way.

"It has long been clearly absurd that a priest without any mandate from anyone, other than a few quarrelsome men in frocks, should have any ex officio position of power," she wrote. "Yet the Archbishop of Canterbury sits in the House of Lords and so do 25 other Anglican lords spiritual by right of unelected office."

An editorial in The Daily Mail suggested that if Williams wants to make political speeches, "he should resign and join the Labor Party which over the last 13 years did such harm to the fabric of British society."

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By Trevor Grundy c. 2011 Religion News Service CANTERBURY, England (RNS) Nearly a millennium ago, four unruly knights crossed the English Channel from France and confronted the archbishop of Cante...
By Trevor Grundy c. 2011 Religion News Service CANTERBURY, England (RNS) Nearly a millennium ago, four unruly knights crossed the English Channel from France and confronted the archbishop of Cante...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:22 PM on 06/20/2011
This man needs to eat more red meat, trim his hair and beard and cut back on those eyebrows. Every time I see him and hear him speak, I feel he is playing acting and is about as sincere as Mz. Palin.
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MilesToGo
01:49 PM on 06/21/2011
Try reading some of his books & poetry...you'll find he easily transcends the solipsistic and simple Sarah Palin, and with absolute sincerity.
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luckyt
08:03 AM on 06/19/2011
What is happening in England is no different then what is Happening here, it is to reinstate what Ronald Reagan, and Margaret Thatcher did in the 80s and that is to propagate the Chicago School theory of economics of Melton Friedman. That is to cut government entitlement spending, (redistribution of wealth) social security, Medicare/Medicaid, education, public services (police-firemen-school teachers), and cut taxes for the corporations and the rich. This and I will keep repeating it is supply-side economics (the Paul Ryan plan) that caused the depression and the mess that we are in. It is Shock Economics; everyone should read Naomi Klein's,... "The Shock Doctrine" so you can see what the Republican and Blue Dog Democrat Corporatist have been doing to our country and the world for over fifty years, it's a must read.
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Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
02:40 AM on 06/19/2011
This is interesting and holds well with statements made in The Telegraph UK news -

"Muslims are integrating into British society better than many Christians, according to the head of the Government's equality watchdog.

Trevor Phillips warned that "an old time religion incompatible with modern society" is driving the revival in the Anglican and Catholic Churches and clashing with mainstream views, especially on homosexuality.

He accused Christians, particularly evangelicals, of being more militant than Muslims in complaining about discrimination, arguing that many of the claims are motivated by a desire for greater political influence."

Christians want a sharia like legal system IMO.
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tonygumbrell
retired working stiff
07:54 PM on 06/18/2011
It is possible that a man of the cloth may also be a man of conscience. That is not always the case, but he does himself and the office great credit by taking the side of the disadvantaged and opposing the power of the government to make the poor pay for the failures and misdeeds of the most affluent.
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06:12 PM on 06/18/2011
He (the "arch Bishop" ) needs to serve the poor like the church is supposed to. Not sanction the government for money to do their own job. If he worried more about the safety of young boys left alone with preists and less about politics, maybe the church would be better accepted, like it once was.
10:04 PM on 06/20/2011
The Anglican Church is not the same as the Roman Catholic Church.
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wbearl
Retired Manager Mechanical Operations
04:44 PM on 06/18/2011
I can remember when one of the most important jobs of any Christen Church was charity and aid to the poor. Now days it seems the most important job of the Church is to get the Government to be charitable and aid the poor. One of the main reasons I haven't darkened the door of a church for 25 years is, if the Government is going to do the job of the church, the church doesn't need my contributions of time or money.
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luckyt
08:11 AM on 06/19/2011
God does not need you're time or money, give it to the GOP. they need it more then the poor and the destitute and the Church is for us repentant sinners not for those that have been saved.
10:05 PM on 06/20/2011
Worst excuse to reject ones' religion ever.
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04:34 PM on 06/18/2011
I actually once knew somebody whose name was Arch Bishop and he was from Canterbury but that was long ago and far away.
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kenhamlett
04:33 PM on 06/18/2011
I am sure the Archbishop feels as many in this country feel. Why are we spending money on wars in other countries while cutting services and benefits back home? I recently wrote on the HuffPost that we had involved ourselves in the war in Libya with the very conservative governments of the UK, France, and Italy -- and likened them to our Republican party. Almost immediately, I received messages saying that "conservative" did not mean the same thing in those countries as in the US and that they were not like Republicans. These comments were from Democrats who were justifying the President's decision to partner with these governments in the Libyan War. So, I am happy to see this story confirming that in fact the parties are very similar to our conservative Republicans. Not only have they involved themselves in wars of choice, but they also (1) favor cutbacks to social programs for the needy, elderly, etc., (2) favor strong restrictions on immigration and the activities of immigrants, (3) oppose policies friendly to the environment, (4) believe that the solution to problems lie with businesses and corporations and not the people, etc. They may practice in different countries, but they are similar to our conservatives and Republicans. The question then remains. Why are we emulating too many of their policies and joining them in wars of choice?
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luckyt
03:48 PM on 06/21/2011
Because they all prescribe to Reaganomics and Thacher economics (Milton Friedman Shock, supply-side-free trade-voodoo-economics)
04:12 PM on 06/18/2011
The Archbishop is a delight to listen to even though I haven't always agreed with him on the issues facing our country. I do hope this speech irritates Cameron and a few other members of Parliament. Keep speaking RW. Someone will get the message eventually.
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idisVA
04:05 PM on 06/18/2011
I wish American Bishops, Cardinals and religious leaders will speak out against the indiscriminate gutting of the social programs by the Republicans.
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Jotunn
My micro-bio is empty
03:53 PM on 06/18/2011
Will the last person to leave the CoE please turn out the lights...
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
04:46 PM on 06/18/2011
Or blow out the candles.
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Dan Kreutzer
03:52 PM on 06/18/2011
At last: moving out of his preoccupation with papalizing the Anglicans and being a voice for the poor
wyldthings
as a young man I said I'd never get old an didn'
04:15 PM on 06/18/2011
Really as he dines at the finest eatery's in the world, probably chouferred in a Rolls Royce. Look at English history King's, then the Church and the rest were and still are peons. When he gives up his million Dollar Properties and passes that out to the poor then he'll get my attention. Till then he's just an extremely wealthy Bishop asking for us to give not him.
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MilesToGo
01:20 AM on 06/19/2011
Your remarks reveal you know very little about Rowan Williams.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
03:51 PM on 06/18/2011
Good for him! It's great to see a man of the cloth stand up like this. I doubt it'll do any good but I admire him for his words.
02:45 PM on 06/18/2011
Bravo to the Archbishop. More leaders need to speak out against propaganda that supports materialistic philosophies of the elite. Humanity needs to be first, castles second.
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
04:47 PM on 06/18/2011
He composed those words in his home, Lambeth Palace.
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jan1760
The Constitution is not an instrument for the gove
02:43 PM on 06/18/2011
This is the same man who championed Sharia Law courts in England- creating a parallel justice system in England specially for family matters- you know honor killings, divorce and custody matters all those issues in which women are well "represented" in Islam. I would not use this man as a beacon of common sense and measure judgement.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
03:52 PM on 06/18/2011
It doesn't mean everything he says is wrong. Think about it.