The Church of England - Shilly-Shallying, Sham Liberality, Compromise and Cowardice


In the light of recent ... er ... "developments" in the Church of England, this article from the Catholoc Herald is well worth a read. It's an extract from GK Chesterton’s 1935 book, The Well and the Shallows. Remarkable that it was written nearly 90 years ago. And yet, even Chesterton, visionary that he was, did not foresee the extent of depravity that actually lay ahead.

"I have explained that these are sketches of six separate occasions, on which I should have become a Catholic, if I had not been the one and only kind of human being who cannot become a Catholic. The excitement of conversion is still open to the atheist and the diabolist; and everybody can be converted except the convert. In my first outline, I mentioned that one of the crises, which would in any case have driven me the way I had gone already, was the shilly-shallying and sham liberality of the famous Lambeth Report on what is quaintly called Birth Control. It is in fact, of course, a scheme for preventing birth in order to escape control. But this particular case was only the culmination of a long process of compromise and cowardice about the problem of sex; the final surrender after a continuous retreat.

"There is one historical human fact which now seems to me so plain and solid, that I think that even if I were to lose the Faith, I could not lose sight of the fact. It has rather the character of a fact of chemistry or geology; though from another side it is mysterious enough, like many other manifest and unmistakable facts.

"It is this: that at the moment when Religion lost touch with Rome, it changed instantly and internally, from top to bottom, in its very substance and the stuff of which it was made. It changed in substance; it did not necessarily change in form or features or externals. It might do the same things; but it could not be the same thing. It might go on saying the same things; but it was not the same thing that was saying them. At the very beginning, indeed, the situation was almost exactly like that. 

"Henry VIII was a Catholic in everything except that he was not a Catholic. He observed everything down to the last bead and candle; he accepted everything down to the last deduction from a definition; he accepted everything except Rome. And in that instant of refusal, his religion became a different religion; a different sort of religion; a different sort of thing. In that instant it began to change; and it has not stopped changing yet. 

"We are all somewhat wearily aware that some Modern Churchmen call such continuous change progress; as when we remark that a corpse crawling with worms has an increased vitality; or that a snow-man, slowly turning into a puddle, is purifying itself of its accretions. But I am not concerned with this argument here. The point is that a dead man may look like a sleeping man a moment after he is dead; but decomposition has actually begun. 

"The point is that the snow-man may in theory be made in the real image of man. Michelangelo made a statue in snow; and it might quite easily have been an exact replica of one of his statues in marble; but it was not in marble. 

"Most probably the snow-man has begun to melt almost as soon as it is made. But even if the frost holds, it is still a stuff capable of melting when the frost goes. It seemed to many that Protestantism would long continue to be, in the popular phrase, a perfect frost. But that does not alter the difference between ice and marble; and marble does not melt.

"The same sort of progressives are always telling us to have a trust in the Future. As a fact, the one thing that a progressive cannot possibly have is a trust in the Future. He cannot have a trust in his own Future; let alone in his own Futurism. If he sets no limit to change, it may change all his own progressive views as much as his conservative views. 

"It was so with the Church first founded by Henry VIII; who was, in almost everything commonly cursed as Popery, rather more Popish than the Pope. He thought he might trust it to go on being orthodox; to go on being sacramentalist; to go on being sacerdotalist; to go on being ritualist, and the rest. There was only one little weakness. It could not trust itself to go on being itself. Nothing else, except the Faith, can trust itself to go on being itself.

"Now touching this truth in relation to Sex, I may be permitted to introduce a trivial journalistic anecdote.  A few years before the War, some of my fellow-journalists, Socialists as well as Tories, were questioning me about what I really meant by Democracy; and especially if I really thought there was anything in Rousseau’s idea of the General Will. I said I thought (and I think I still think) that there can be such a thing, but it must be much more solid and unanimous than a mere majority, such as rules in party politics. I applied the old phrase of the Man in the Street, by saying that if I looked out of the window at a strange man walking past my house, I could bet heavily on his thinking some things, but not the common controversial things. The Liberals might have a huge majority, but he need not be a Liberal; statistics might prove England to be preponderantly Conservative, but I would not bet a button that he would be Conservative. 

"But (I said) I should bet that he believes in wearing clothes. And my Socialist questioners did not question this; they, too, accepted clothes as so universal an agreement of common sense and civilisation, that we might attribute the tradition to a total stranger, unless he were a lunatic. Such a little while ago! To-day, when I see the stranger walking down the street, I should not bet that he believes even in clothes. The country is dotted with Nudist Colonies; the bookstalls are littered with Nudist magazines; the papers swarm with polite little paragraphs, praising the brownness and braveness of the special sort of anarchical asses here in question. At any given moment, there may be a General Will; but it is an uncommonly weak and wavering sort of will, without the Faith to support it.

"As in that one matter of modesty, or the mere externals of sex, so in all the deeper matters of sex, the modern will has been amazingly weak and wavering. And I suppose it is because the Church has known from the first this weakness which we have all discovered at last, that about certain sexual matters She has been very decisive and dogmatic; as many good people have quite honestly thought, too decisive and dogmatic. 

"Now a Catholic is a person who has plucked up courage to face the incredible and inconceivable idea that something else may be wiser than he is. And the most striking and outstanding illustration is perhaps to be found in the Catholic view of marriage as compared with the modern theory of divorce; not, it must be noted, the very modern theory of divorce, which is the mere negation of marriage; but even more the slightly less modern and more moderate theory of divorce, which was generally accepted even when I was a boy. 

"This is the very vital point or test of the question; for it explains the Church’s rejection of the moderate as well as the immoderate theory. It illustrates the very fact I am pointing out, that Divorce has already turned into something totally different from what was intended, even by those who first proposed it.

"Already we must think ourselves back into a different world of thought, in order to understand how anybody ever thought it was compatible with Victorian virtue; and many very virtuous Victorians did. But they only tolerated this social solution as an exception; and many other modern social solutions they would not have tolerated at all. My own parents were not even orthodox Puritans or High Church people; they were Universalists more akin to Unitarians. But they would have regarded Birth-Prevention exactly as they would have regarded Infanticide. Yet about Divorce such liberal Protestants did hold an intermediate view, which was substantially this. They thought the normal necessity and duty of all married people was to remain faithful to their marriage; that this could be demanded of them, like common honesty or any other virtue. But they thought that in some very extreme and extraordinary cases a divorce was allowable. 

"Now, putting aside our own mystical and sacramental doctrine, this was not, on the face of it, an unreasonable position. It certainly was not meant to be an anarchical position. But the Catholic Church, standing almost alone, declared that it would in fact lead to an anarchical position; and the Catholic Church was right.

"Any man with eyes in his head, whatever the ideas in his head, who looks at the world as it is to-day, must know that the whole social substance of marriage has changed; just as the whole social substance of Christianity changed with the divorce of Henry VIII. As in the other case, the externals remained for a time and some of them remain still. 

"Some divorced persons, who can be married quite legally by a registrar, go on complaining bitterly that they cannot be married by a priest. They regard a church as a peculiarly suitable place in which to make and break the same vow at the same moment.

"And the [Anglican] Bishop of London, who was supposed to sympathise with the more sacramental party, recently submitted to such a demand on the ground that it was a very special case. As if every human being’s case were not a special case.

"That decision was one of the occasions on which I should have done a bolt, if I had delayed it so long. But the general social atmosphere is much the most important matter. Numbers of normal people are getting married, thinking already that they may be divorced. The instant that idea enters, the whole conception of the old Protestant compromise vanishes. The sincere and innocent Victorian would never have married a woman reflecting that he could divorce her. He would as soon have married a woman reflecting that he could murder her. These things were not supposed to be among the daydreams of the honeymoon. The psychological substance of the whole thing has altered; the marble has turned to ice; and the ice has melted with most amazing rapidity. The Church was right to refuse even the exception. The world has admitted the exception; and the exception has become the rule.

"As I have said, the weak and inconclusive pronouncement upon Birth-Prevention was only the culmination of this long intellectual corruption. I need not discuss the particular problem again at this point; beyond saying that the same truth applies as in the case of Divorce. 

"People propose an easy way out of certain human responsibilities and difficulties; including a way out of the responsibility and difficulty of doing economic justice and achieving better payment for the poor. But these people propose this easy method, in the hope that some people will only use it to a moderate extent; whereas it is much more probable that an indefinite number will use it to an indefinite extent. It is odd that they do not see this; because the writers and thinkers among them are no longer by any means optimistic about human nature, like Rousseau; but much more pessimistic about human nature than we are. 

"Considering mankind as described, for instance, by Mr. Aldous Huxley, it is hard to see what answer he could possibly give, except the answer which we give, if the question were put thus: 'On the one side, there is an easy way out of the difficulty by avoiding childbirth on the other side, there is a very difficult way out of the difficulty, by reconstructing the whole social system and toiling and perhaps fighting for the better system. Which way are the men you describe more likely to take?'

"But my concern is not with open and direct opponents like Mr. Huxley; but with all to whom I might once have looked to defend the country of the Christian altars. They ought surely to know that the foe now on the frontiers offers no terms of compromise; but threatens a complete destruction. And they have sold the pass."

Comments

  1. And now the Church of England is puzzling its little head over the "gender" of God.

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    1. The CofE threw away a golden opportunity to connect with people about the Big Existential Issues during Covid, and is now devoting its time to irrelevant navel gazing and appeasing left wing atheists. It absolutely deserves to go extinct.

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  2. Chesterton is always worth a read, on any subject. One wonders what he would have made of Amoris Laetitia. Or the German Synodal Path. Or James Martin. Or Pachamama. That's the worst aspect of modernist Catholicism -- we don't get to laugh at the Protestants anymore.
    Apparently, the Church of England's latest Agony in the Garden is over the gender of God. Here's an agnostic take on it from Ireland.

    https://gript.ie/church-of-england-perhaps-god-is-not-a-he-after-all/

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    1. Somebody once said that the Catholic Church is ten years behind the Church of England. The current management seems intent on closing that gap.

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    2. Some may try but HJ can't see the Church shifting her dogmatic or doctrinal positions on artificial birth control, divorce and remarriage, abortion or same sex genital acts.

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    3. They don't need to get the Church to shift her dogmatic position, just to obfuscate and sow confusion until their views are reflected in practice - this is more or less what's happened with birth control. One needn't change dogma on remarriage, for example, if one normalises handing out annulments like confetti. That's how many of the changes in the CofE happened: they were practice led (this furore around Synod allowing the blessing of SSM totally ignores the fact that many parishes are already doing it anyway). Converts like Gavin are warning the CC of this, they've been there before, and people need to take notice.

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  3. Going to Church in Medieval England describes changes pre and post reformation to the role of clerics.

    Servants of God became aides to Caesar. The local vicar was not like the priest or friar of yesteryear: “He could be married. He had lost whatever distinction had come from celebrating frequent masses, hearing confessions, or saying prayers for the dead. On the other hand he had gained new importance in a Church of England governed by the crown, which made him more of a royal officer than before. He read an official liturgy, preached the official homilies, and kept the official record of births, marriages, and deaths.”

    The hybrid church structure which eventually emerged during the reign of Elizabeth I preserved much of the structure of what had gone before, so much so that the experience of churchgoing was in many ways quite similar, even though the religious character of England had been irrevocably changed.

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  4. Also recommended, A History of the Protestant Reformation in England and Ireland by William Cobbett—not a historian but a campaigning journalist and MP. A Protestant himself, in his book published in the 1820s he sets out the evidence for his case that the Reformation left people much worse off than they had been before.

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  5. I think I've expressed my complete disdain for serial adulterer and all-round thug Henry VIII before, so I hope nobody will take the following as mounting a defence of the first Supreme Governor. Like Tyndale, I do not accept his nonsense that Catherine was anything other than his lawfully wedded wife, and that his subsequent "marriage" to his mistress was adultery.

    Mind you, nor do I accept the equally nonsensical ruling made a few decades earlier in favour of Louis XII "annulling" his 22-year marriage to his wife Joan and handwaved through by the pope of the day. Nor for that matter, in the decades after Henry's Great Affair, the "annulment" for the 13-year marriage between Henry IV of Castile and his first wife, also blessed and rubber stamped by Rome.

    And indeed it must be said that when it comes to flexing the rules for in-vogue rulers, I still find it incredible that the serial adulterer and two-bit thug of our own age, one Boris Johnson, should be welcomed with open arms by Westminster Cathedral for a "marriage" to his mistress on the narrow, legalistic grounds that all of his preceding unions had not been done in a Roman Catholic Church so could be handwaved away.

    But I suppose I must note quite why I am unimpressed and unpersuaded by this collection of adulteries and infidelities, each variously authorised by earthly powers. Very simply, because I have the plain teaching of Jesus in the Scriptures. That, and that alone, is the source of authority on this matter, and I believe it is possessed of an authority that is unmoved by the shameless political expediency exhibited so often across the ages by the Roman Catholic Church as it is the "progression" by many Protestant denominations into open disobedience on this matter.

    Both err when they decide they can set rules in defiance of what Jesus taught. Both have erred. I'm not seeing much to recommend either as infallible.

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    1. ... the plain teaching of Jesus in the Scriptures

      Is that the Markan or the Matthean teaching?

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    2. One can't disagree with the thrust of your comment. However, opportunistic decisions by Catholic popes and bishops are not infallible or indefectible. They're matters of church discipline and canon law, and those making decisions for improper reasons will be answerable before God - as will those who "remarry" knowing their first marriages were valid.

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    3. I know, and I think the key thing which I'd come back to is that *on paper* I am very glad that the Catholic Church has just about managed to hold the line on keeping the prohibition of divorce in place.

      Likewise, there are no shortage of Protestant denominations who have chucked it into the bonfire. But personally I no more consider myself to be in fellowship with such denominations than I do the Mormons.

      The thrust of the Chesterton quote (who I am indeed very fond of also) is that abandoning Rome is the root cause of much of the disarray that has followed. My point is that if this is the case, someone ought to remind Rome of this through the ages. I don't hold up Protestantism as a *replacement* Rome, fidelity to which guarantees obedience to Christ either. I think they have both fallen short of the standard evinced in the Gospel and in the wider Scriptures, and continue to fall short in many ways but especially on this subject.

      But the reason that you and I fundamentally agree on the wrongness of divorce is not the consequence of a shared denomination or anything that rests in your or mine identity - our agreement is the consequence of what is written in the Scriptures.

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    4. Just by way of addendum/example:
      "Now a Catholic is a person who has plucked up courage to face the incredible and inconceivable idea that something else may be wiser than he is. "

      I think there's a huge amount of sense in this statement. But I hold to the incredible and inconceivable idea that the "something" is the Word of God.

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    5. Jesus makes an exception in one but not the other. Some would argue that Matthew's insertion of the adultery clause should be read in light of arguments between the rabbinic schools of the day - Matthew was writing for Jews, after all. So, is that relevant to us?

      Others would point out that the New Testament has no word for 'divorce', so it's overly reductive to simply apply it to divorce in a modern context.

      And what about the Pauline exceptions for unbelievers? Jesus doesn't teach that couple can separate because they're 'unequally yoked', yet Paul does.

      So the 'clear teaching of scripture' quickly becomes quite muddy.

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    6. As I say, there is no conflict. But I'd certainly acknowledge that there is no difficulty in anyone introducing one. Indeed, for every objection you raise, I am sure there are perhaps dozens of others that might also be raised.

      Language is not difficult to pick apart. Any uttered statement can be dissected and subjected to any amount of linguistic pressure. I do not underestimate the ability of humans to do so.

      But what I do think is clear is that we don't usually do it without motivation. I don't see people falling over themselves to split hairs over many many verses in the Bible. But endless reams have been written over the verses that make a demand, that impose a standard.

      It's not difficult to read the verses clearly. It doesn't mean its a comforting read. In this case, we know that it wasn't comforting at the time: we have the recorded response of Jesus' own disciples showing equal levels of alarm.

      But that's the nature of the teaching. The question that really matters is do we accept it?

      The Scriptures will inevitably force any reader to confront something in their own lives, their own beliefs, their own actions. I don't doubt the ability of mankind to find reasons to say "this teaching doesn't apply *to me*" or "this teaching isn't important *now*". But is that a motivation that belongs to the desire to seek after and more deeply resemble Christ, or is it a motivation of the flesh to justify what it desires?

      It's something that comes through right the way through the Gospels and the Epistles in particular: the things of God may not be easy, but they are clear. The question is whether we want to hear clearly, or we want to find reasons to hand wave it away.

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    7. And yet all those positions I outlined are those of Protestant theologians who also claim to follow 'the plain meaning of scripture'. One gospel says that divorce is never allowed, one makes one exception, St. Paul (explicitly speaking on his own authority, not the Lord's) adds another. So isn't it OK to add extra exemptions - such as domestic abuse, and so on - if he does? Or are St. Paul's epistles secondary to the Gospels? In which case, Jesus says nothing about same sex relationships, but St. Paul condemns them - so can we ignore those condemnations, if the epistles are only secondary to Christ's own words? We can sidestep, of course, and say that the Old Testament condemnations are Christ's words, but then we also have to allow polygamy.

      It sounds very noble and pious to say that one only follows the 'clear teachings of scripture', but what one is actually doing is follow one's own interpretation of scripture - that is, one is following oneself. This is why the Sola Scriptura world infinitely fragments. Even in the case of marriage and divorce, there are certain exegetical decisions that have to be made, as you have done in your own post. This is inevitable, but it's not 'the clear reading of scripture' - it's your reading of scripture.

      It's worth noting that the 'Bishop' of Worcester's argument that same sex marriage is in accord with the scriptures follows this exact same reasoning. Biblical teaching on marriage is mutable, so there's no reason why it shouldn't continue to evolve, particularly since there are many other biblical teachings that we disregard. He feels that it's compatible with the 'clear teachings of scripture', and as long as one appeals to oneself as the ultimate authority, he's quite correct.

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    8. The apparent loophole in Matthew 19:9 ("...except for adultery...") is a classic example of why sola scriptura is such a shaky foundation of faith. Matthew's gospel was written in Greek, and in that language, at that time, the standard word for adultery was "moicheia". But Matthew does not use that word. Instead, he uses the word "porneia", which means simply fornication or illicit sexual acts. In other words, sex outside marriage. Many scholars would argue that he is, in fact, referring here to concubinage, or "living over the brush". THOSE relationships can be put aside, but not a legitimately formed marriage.

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    9. We have Jesus' teachings plainly recorded. If one thinks that the basis of Scripture is shaky - and there are indeed many who do - where precisely is the better source?

      If I say "it is impossible to truly know what Jesus really meant because we can find an infinite variation of claims being asserted against this text" then why would I then turn to any particular group, one over another? If it is true that it is "my interpretation" then so it goes for *all* interpretations, since all interpretations proceed from the same texts.

      But I don't think that makes sense in the wider context of Christian faith. Somehow, we end up with people who believe that a man, who was God incarnate, was crucified and raised from the dead, is somehow confounded by textual analysis. That for all His great wisdom, God could not anticipate the sheer tidal wave of academic insight.

      My argument is much, much simpler. Jesus gave a teaching on divorce that, we read, went down like a shock with His own disciples. They thought it might be better to never marry than to be rid of the ability to set aside a spouse and remarry.

      I think they, and everyone writing here, fully grasp what the meaning of that teaching is. I don't think anyone here needs me or anyone else to explain it to them once they've read those passages. That this topic, like a number of others, instantly provokes a chorus of voices insistent that "nobody can fully know" or "it's not clear" is itself evidence that the text is perfectly clear in its meaning and its intent.

      It just isn't popular or comfortable.

      When the Holy Spirit inspired the writing of the Scriptures, the compiling of the Scriptures and the formation of the canon of the Scriptures, He knew exactly each and every moment that each and every word would be read throughout all of time to come. He is quite unlike the human author who must release their text into the world and not have any clue how it will be received.

      He knew and knows our minds and our hearts in the hour in which we read, respond and wrestle with His Word. None of us need anyone else to examine our own minds and hearts when we do that. I know plain rightly when I'm trying to find reasons to skirt something I'm reading. I may swear blind to every human being I ever meet that this is not so, that I have grave ethical or textual or academic reservations. But I know the truth even if I lock it in the most inner chamber of my heart and spend my strength denying it.

      So I don't expect to write anything that is going to "win" this debate with anyone. I do have faith that the clear teaching of Jesus is true and holy and comprehensible.

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    10. "When the Holy Spirit inspired the writing of the Scriptures, the compiling of the Scriptures and the formation of the canon of the Scriptures, He knew exactly each and every moment that each and every word would be read throughout all of time to come."

      Yes and God knew there would be division and disagreement. Look at the history of the early Church. This is why Christ gave teaching authority to Peter and the bishops and promised them and their successors the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

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    11. Peter and the Apostles - bishops didn't exist when Christ sent the disciples out for the final time - but, yes, I would clearly agree that the Holy Spirit led them in their teaching, since a large portion of the New Testament was effectively either written by them or written to record their teaching. But therein lies my point: we have that teaching on paper, so to speak, and insofar as any subsequent church leadership either subverts, rejects or distorts it, such leadership can be held against the standards set down in the Scriptures.

      To put it very simply: if you can imagine a doctrine which you would not accept on account of the fact it contradicts what is in the Scriptures, then by definition (even if only hypothetically) the Scriptures bound the authority of Church leadership.

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    12. This seems like a long and convoluted way of saying "it's all good", and "whatever you're having yourself" (or, dare I say, "who am I to judge"). Perhaps you could give us the "plain and clear" teaching of Jesus on whether a man can divorce and remarry in the case of adultery or not?

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  6. Jules Gomes, now the Rome correspondent for Church Militant, takes aim at the introduction of blessings for same sex couples in the C of E—and in the Catholic Church too:
    https://www.churchmilitant.com/news/article/prelate-cites-newman-to-push-gay-blessings

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  7. A Birmingham priest is testing the "No Praying" censorship zones round abortion clinics:
    https://www.pillarcatholic.com/meet-the-priest-highlighting-englands-abortion-censorship-zones/

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