HomeInterviewsRowan Williams: ‘I don’t know whether the Anglican Communion will survive’

Rowan Williams: ‘I don’t know whether the Anglican Communion will survive’

Published on

Please Help Anglican.Ink with a donation.

It is, Rowan Williams assures me, a coincidence that his new book will be published three days after the installation of Sarah Mullally as Archbishop of Canterbury. 

“I will not be attending,” he says. “You don’t want to be Marley’s ghost.”

Yet, fittingly – since that book takes solidarity as its theme – this priest, poet and critic is keen to empathise with Mullally, the first female Archbishop, in the weight of challenges she faces. 

“Every archbishop starts, like every president or prime minister: with expectations being thrown at them,” he recalls of his time at Lambeth Palace from 2002 to 2012. 

“Realising you’re not going to be able to meet them is part of the job. It is no walk in the park.”

Williams, who now lives in Cardiff with his theologian wife Jane, comes across as gentler, kinder and more self-deprecating than I remember him from his episcopal tenure. 

He used to make regular headlines, his every utterance and act picked apart. 

His 2011 dismissal of David Cameron’s “Big Society” initiative as “painfully stale” had the Conservative benches in uproar. 

Today, as we sit talking in a book-lined reception room at his publisher’s London office, he stands out from the colourful backdrop in his black clerical shirt and trousers, with a simple cross hanging round his neck. 

Those monkish eyebrows remain as untamed as ever.

The two biggest issues in Mullally’s in-tray, Williams tells me, are the same ones he tried but failed to settle during his turbulent decade in post: women’s ordination and what he refers to as “the same-sex question”. 

Read it all in Clerical Whispers

Latest articles

Archbishop Mullally’s sermon in Birzeit

Archbishop Sarah was making the first visit of an Archbishop of Canterbury to St...

Sydney bishop reports on Ebola crisis from the Congo

Churches and aid groups are urgently mobilising as a vaccine-resistant strain of the viral...

Former Pittsburgh dean pleads guilty to petty theft

A former dean of Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Pittsburgh has admitted in court to...

Archbishop of Canterbury begins pilgrimage to the Holy Land

Archbishop Sarah has begun a five-day visit to Palestine and Israel at the invitation...

More like this

Archbishop Mullally’s sermon in Birzeit

Archbishop Sarah was making the first visit of an Archbishop of Canterbury to St...

Sydney bishop reports on Ebola crisis from the Congo

Churches and aid groups are urgently mobilising as a vaccine-resistant strain of the viral...