From the Press Office of
The Archbishop of Canterbury
Lambeth Palace
Embargoed until 18:00hrs Monday 13 October 1997


18.00 HRS Monday 13 October 1997
ARCHBISHOP URGES CHURCH TO CONTINUE TO INNOVATE FOR NEW MILLENNIUM


The Archbishop of Canterbury today urged the Church of England to continue to adapt and innovate in order to connect more effectively with the spiritual needs of millions of people who feel estranged from organised religion. The Archbishop used his Ashe Lecture in St Helen's Church, Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire, to set out an agenda for continuing change around the themes of confidence, mission and unity.

"Let me stress again that I am not advocating the wholesale rejection of the traditional and well loved from the past", said the Archbishop, "But I do plead for a vigorous diversification as we try to make the glories of the faith accessible to people where they are, now, and not where we might prefer them to be."

Drawing heavily on lessons from "the humbling, astonishing reaction to the death of Diana, Princess of Wales", the Archbishop argued that the decline in formal religious observance in Western Europe clearly did not imply wholesale abandonment of belief in the religious and spiritual significance of life. He praised the manner in which Westminster Abbey, and many other cathedrals and churches, had made themselves available in a sensitive and inclusive way to so many people in their grief and perplexity. Many people wanted to participate in simple rituals such as lighting candles, laying wreaths or praying quietly in their own way. "I hope many churches will take this much further, in imaginative new ways. We must make more space for people to open their hearts to God and express themselves - and not be content simply to offer our own established rituals on a take it or leave it basis." The Archbishop praised the creative use of special services touching people at points of joy or sorrow or concern, and helping them come nearer to Christ. Nor, he stressed, should the effort to engage estranged people be confined to church services.

In producing revised liturgies for worship, the Church should aim for simplicity, beauty and brevity, with space left for spontaneity and variation within a firm framework. Whilst for many people, "the great cadences of the Book of Common Prayer or the tradition of religious poetry" had a special power and should remain as an important, live part of the Church's tradition, it was also possible for modern and simple ways of talking about our faith to be beautiful: "let us bring to our aid novelists, poets, musicians and artists who from their explorations touch the world of the spirit."

Further key agenda points in reaching out to people in modern society were

The Archbishop pointed to signs of growing confidence within the Church of England, with ordinations up by fifteen per cent this year. "And our capacity for reform and self-renewal has been demonstrated again and again. Profound changes in patterns of ministry. The empowerment of lay people. Burgeoning numbers of non-stipendiary ministers. The reforms in the Church Commissioners and our national institutions. The ordination of thousands of women to the diaconate and priesthood. Dynamic evangelising initiatives and church planting. The Church of England is on the move", declared the Archbishop, "trusting not in our own capacities alone but in the radical power of God's Holy Spirit."

The full text of the speech can be found on the Archbishop's web pages from 14.00 hrs 13/10/97:

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