NEW ARCHBISHOP
OF CANTERBURY RAISES
MORALITY ISSUES IN
FIRST PUBLIC LECTURE
In what one newspaper called
a "morality crusade," the new archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams,
used his first public lecture to plead for a role for religion in political
debate.
In the Dimbleby Lecture, delivered
December 19 before a distinguished audience of politicians, church leaders,
journalists and other opinion makers, Williams argued that without religion
"our whole politics is likely to be in deep trouble." He also pointed to
the limitations of governments to
provide a moral basis for citizens
or long-term security.
Williams said we are living
in a time when the "basic assumptions about how states work are shifting"
and may be witnessing "the end of the nation-state," replaced in the developed
world "by what some call the market-state." As a result, short-term expectations
could produce "instability,
reactive administration, rule
by opinion poll and pressure."
"We are bound to ask where there
is a future for the reasonable citizen, for public debate about what is
due to human beings, for intelligent argument about goals beyond the next
election," he said. "My conclusion is that this future depends heavily
on those perspectives that are offered by religious belief."
Williams described an educational
system that is largely empty of vision, a system that fits "too neatly
into the consumer model" that allows the "actual philosophy of education
itself to be obscured behind a cloud of sometimes mechanical criteria of
attainment."
Religion could fill the vacuum,
according to the archbishop. "If specifically religious tradition has a
place here it is because of those elements that only religious conviction
seems to secure in our sense of what is human. To see or know anything
adequately is to be aware of its relation to the eternal," he said. "With
that relativising moment, our whole politics is likely to be in deep trouble."
He added that he is convinced that religion can offer ways to open the
way for human choices, providing a wider context and setting for understanding
who we are as individuals and communities.
Prime Minister Tony Blair praised
Williams for his "insights," suggesting in a newspaper interview that "the
church should always speak out where it feels strongly about things." He
said that he did not agree, however, that consumerism was driving morality
out of politics.
Full text of the lecture
is available at... http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/