The wonder is that it has taken this long. That the rest of the Anglican Communion has all the way up to 2012 agreed to have its Primates’ Meeting chaired by whoever had been made Archbishop of Canterbury by whichever Muslim or atheist happened at the time to be Prime Minister of the third successor-state to Henry VIII’s Kingdom of England. The Anglican Communion was in any case overwhelmingly created by people who did not
like the Church of England, or very often the English in general.
The
Church of Ireland has provided two Presidents of the Irish Republic,
including the ardently Irish-speaking first one, both of them in the
days when that Republic’s Constitution still laid claim to “the whole
island of Ireland”. James Ussher wrote to his Canterbury counterpart as
“Brother Primate” and even “Brother Patriarch”; their equality was
undoubted on either side. (Ussher’s calculations of the date of creation
are by far the least interesting thing about him, and a full biography
was quite recently published by Professor Alan Ford of Nottingham, who
previously had the questionable pleasure of lecturing me at Durham on
the Reformation.)
Anglicans and not Presbyterians may
have founded the Orange Order and the Ulster Unionist Party, but the
very many who are still in them, and very many are, are fully part of
the “Ulster British” culture that includes never cheering for England
against anyone, and supporting the Union strictly as a means of
defending and of paying for what is really the State of Ulster. Only
half of the Church of Ireland is in the Northern Ireland, with the other
half cheerfully in the Republic.
The Governing Body of
the Church in Wales includes Lord Elis-Thomas, the first person ever
elected to the House of Commons specifically as a Welsh Nationalist
before becoming the first ever such Peer, although the Leader of Plaid
Cymru actively encourages his members to apply, and another previous
holder of that office has in fact been ennobled. Most people assume that
R S Thomas was a Chapel minister. He was not.
The
Episcopal Church in the United States is a product of the American
Revolution, deriving its name and orders from the Episcopal Church in
Scotland, which then had a recent history of armed insurrection against
the Hanoverian monarchy, and which remains heavily concentrated in the
area where the SNP is also strongest. Half of all Jacobite fighters
throughout these Islands were Scottish Episcopalians, with many
Lowlanders among them adopting Highland dress as a sort of Jacobite
uniform, leading to the false impression among the English that they
were being invaded by Highlanders rather than, as very frequently in
reality, by men whose only language was English and who worshipped
according to the Book of Common Prayer. Especially in the nineteenth
century, American Episcopalians have provided several extremely
anti-British Presidents of the United States. I should be amazed if
Australian Anglicans were any more or less monarchist or anti-monarchist
than the population at large.
Most of the rest of the
Anglican Communion’s founding fathers were either hardline
Anglo-Catholics or hardline Evangelicals, and had deliberately gone to
the ends of the earth, by no means only within the British Empire, in
order to escape from the Church of England and start again from scratch,
keeping in touch for purposes of spiritual and material support only
with parishes whose clergy were, and are, seldom or never made bishops
in England. In stark contrast to the Catholic Church in Zimbabwe, the
Anglican Church there is closely allied to Robert Mugabe. There were
plenty of Anglican clergymen and laymen in the Mau Mau.
And so on, and on, and on.
The Church of England needs to get over itself.
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