New Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby inherits divided Anglican Communion

Justin Welby…incoming Archbishop of Canterbury (PHOTO: Archbishopofcanterbury.org)

Originally published in Christianity Today

Bishop Justin Welby, a former oil executive who’s emerged as a critic of corporate excess, was named Friday (Nov. 9) as the 105th archbishop of Canterbury, primate of the Church of England and leader of the worldwide 77 million-member Anglican Communion.

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A statement from British Prime Minister David Cameron confirmed the appointment after two days of speculation. Welby, 56, succeeds Archbishop Rowan Williams, who will return to academia at Cambridge University next year.

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Speaking at a news conference on Friday, Welby said he is “utterly optimistic” about the future of the Church of England.

He said that the question of gay marriage in his new global flock was a complicated issue “and not one to be handled today, off the cuff.”

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But he offered a definite olive branch to the gay community despite reaffirming his opposition to same-sex marriage. Welby pledged to re-examine his own thinking on homosexuality while speaking out against exclusion and homophobia.

“I know I need to listen very attentively to the LGBT communities and examine my own thinking prayerfully and carefully,” he said.

In the United States, where the Episcopal Church is the official American branch of Anglicanism, Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori signaled that she’s ready to work with Welby, acknowledging that “his gifts of reconciliation and discernment will be abundantly tested.”

Episcopalians’ progressive policies on homosexuality have strained ties with Canterbury in the last 10 years, particularly after the approval of gay bishops and same-sex marriages led to a small schism in the U.S. church.

“The bishops of the Episcopal Church have met him and shared fruitful conversation, worship and learning with him,” at a meeting earlier this year, Jefferts Schori said in a statement.

Welby’s appointment follows weeks of wrangling by members of the Crown Nominations Commission – a panel of four women and 15 men – and a split over whether to choose a “liberal” reformer or a “safe pair of hands” to maintain the status quo in a church that’s divided at home and abroad on matters of gender and sexuality.

Welby’s background in business and finance and his opposition to same-sex marriage makes him popular not only with conservatives within the Church of England but also with the evangelical Anglican provinces of Africa and Asia. His work as a peace negotiator on Williams’ behalf has won him the respect of Muslim and Jewish leaders.

“One of his many roles will be continuing the interfaith work of his predecessor and advancing the special connection between believers,” said Rabbi Jonathan Romain, a spokesman for Britain’s liberal Reform Jewish movement. “The more multi-faith Britain becomes, the more such work is needed and he has already distinguished himself in this area.”

Welby, the current bishop of Durham, comes out of the fastest-growing wing of the Church of England, the evangelical movement that has helped to shape Christianity in Britain and other parts of the world with the popular Alpha Bible study course. (Welby replaced theologian N.T. Wright as bishop of Durham almost exactly one year ago.)

Welby’s appointment is expected to seal a vote in favor of allowing women bishops at a special meeting of the Church of England’s General Synod held in London later this month.

The first female bishop could be chosen as soon as spring 2014.

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