Many of us in the Church of England have acquired labels, self-designated or otherwise, to describe what is known as our churchmanship. The labels that are given us, or we give ourselves, are a bit like a foreign language to those not in the know. Evangelicals especially have many varieties – open, post, conservative and moderate to name but a few. High Church Anglicans also have an equally bewildering cluster of labels which normally centre around the word catholic. The best way to penetrate the confusion of these labels is, in most cases, to find out who is the leader or mentor that a particular individual identifies with. This is a particularly useful method when we try and understand the tribal complexities of the world of Anglican evangelicalism. These identified leaders of the various evangelical groups will each have a distinct nuanced take on a variety of topics within the parameters of evangelical thinking. They will have an opinion on the topics of the day, women’s ministry, speaking in tongues, same sex marriage, critical views on the Bible and the question of who outside the group can be associated with. But the nature of human groups also means that, even when we have identified leaders and those who identify with them, we will find nothing permanent about them. Loyalties and allegiances will be in a constant state of flux. Officially all evangelicals are bound by a central statement of faith. That statement of faith should make them a united and an unchallengeably powerful group in the Church of England. But the reality is different. To take one example. When GAFCON was formed in 2008 to protest the liberal tendencies in the Anglican Communion, many English evangelicals rallied round the so-called Jerusalem Declaration. The current support for this group has weakened somewhat over the past twelve years. At present GAFCON UK struggles to pay for a full-time administrator. The strength of this organisation exists elsewhere – Australia, Africa and the States but not in England. In the same way we learn from contributors to this blog about the varying fortunes of the Evangelical Group on General Synod (EGGS) group. Once again, accepting the testimony of our contributors, we learn that this group has lost some of its power by insisting on adhering to a politically hard-line statement of evangelical belief.
In summary what we are claiming is that the ‘Momentum’ faction among Church of England evangelicals seems less powerful today. My last blog was on the power of the CEEC to represent and speak for Anglican evangelicals. It seems that the video The Beautiful Story has exposed several new fissures in the evangelical monolith in Britain. Not every evangelical wants to have their belief system articulated by others or to be told what they think about every detail of personal sexual morality. The nuances of personal history and belief are seldom articulated satisfactorily by others. Not everyone finds it helpful to hang their personal belief statement on a list of propositions prepared by a committee in perhaps another country. Tribal/party positioning and systems of belief may be becoming less important for the same reasons that churchmanship labels have declined in importance.
There is one further generalisation about the Church of England connected with churchmanship, which it is important to examine. It is reported that most Church of England bishops in post are evangelicals. The truth of this statement could be determined by an examination of each of their personal histories in the Crockford Directory. I have not done that piece of research, but I make these comments on the assumption that this statement is likely to be true. Simultaneously we note that the evangelical label seems not to make any but a tiny minority of this group card-carrying activists in the style of Labour’s Momentum. Few appear to identify with or follow the narrow tribalism of the big ReNew parishes in London and elsewhere. Few have openly supported the CEEC makers of the video The Beautiful Story. At best, we can describe this cohort of evangelical bishops in the House of Bishops as being cultural evangelicals. The evangelical tradition is somewhere in their Christian stories. Pragmatically, it does not represent everything they are now. For example, this group of bishops seem to realise that whatever their beliefs are, it is not prudent or helpful to engage in theological controversy with those who do not agree with them. We are all relieved that it is impossible to take out a CDM simply because one member of the church does not agree with the theology of another member. If bishops and others were political in this sense, arguing constantly about theological issues, that would be a seriously disruptive and unsettling situation. In one diocese a bishop, now retired, made a point of appointing only conservative evangelicals of the same tribe as himself. That left a legacy which is hard to undo and this diocese will be marked (and weakened) by this political intervention for a generation.
I began by mentioning that churchmanship labels are often self-designated. I thought it might be useful to take the example of one individual and explain how churchmanship loyalties can start but also change. This example involves my own story and goes back to the autumn of 1964 when I first arrived as an undergraduate in Oxford. From the point of view of ecclesiastical choices, Oxford was like a fabulous restaurant offering a myriad of dishes. It was hard to choose. On the very first Sunday (after attending college chapel) I had a choice of attending St Aldates, the lively evangelical church in the centre of the city or the cathedral right opposite. Why was I considering St Aldates? The reason was that a teacher at the school I had attended in Eastbourne eleven years before (aged 7) was the sister of the Rector, Keith de Berry. I felt some distant loyalty to an evangelical past which I had met at her school. But there was another churchmanship loyalty which I also needed to honour. This was my formation in a cathedral choir school from the age of eight. This had inculcated a love of polyphonic music to be heard barely two hundred yards away on the other side of the road at Christ Church Cathedral. A busy road separated these two ecclesiastical worlds. The story does not resolve itself in a tidy way. After a few weeks alternating between the two, I found myself at Pusey House, a very high church institution. I eventually graduated to the role of thurifer. This allowed me to perfect the skill of generating enormous clouds of incense at High Mass. I wonder if health and safety rules would now allow so much smoke in church!
The lesson I took from Oxford was that worship (and churchmanship) cultures come with many different forms. Although the differences can be described in cultural terms, the important thing is that different groups of people become accustomed to the variety of practices we describe as worship. Experiencing everything from Christian Union meetings to Orthodox liturgies meant one important thing for me personally. No one would ever be able to convince me that a single form of worship should take precedence over all others. Later I spent two years studying for a higher degree in the theology of the Orthodox liturgy. Although I cannot write about my findings here, I can share a couple of sentences. The Eastern Orthodox experience of worship is quite distinctive in the way that, unlike the west, it honours imagery and visual experience. The worshipper ‘sees’ divine reality in the liturgy far more than he/she hears and interprets spoken words, understanding them in a cerebral way.
The conclusion I want to offer my reader is that churchmanship is always going to vary across the church-going population. It is never a question of establishing right and wrong in this area. Differing theological ideas may be often far closer to each other than the rules of logic might suggest. Worship, whether through silence, raucous singing or the still perfection of a Palestrina mass, will communicate God to different people. It will also be wrong to suggest to another Christian that his/her experience of worship is wrong in some way. It is also wrong automatically ever to assume that what someone else believes is wrong. There may be times when I need to question this idea, but I have a sense, honed by my rich exposure to the variety of religious expression in Oxford all those years ago, that our approach to another person’s experience of God must normally be one of humble awe.