Wed 13 Nov 2024 by Heather Preston
Christian leaders across the Church are sharing their responses to the recent resignation of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
The Most Rev Justin Welby stepped down on Tuesday as the 105th Archbishop of Canterbury, following criticism for his handling of abuse cases involving the late barrister John Smyth.
The Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell, called Welbyโs decision โthe right and honourable thing,โ praising his work toward safeguarding reform and committing to ensure that similar failures โnever happen again.โ
Rt Rev Dr. Helen-Ann Hartley, Bishop of Newcastle, who played a key role in urging Welbyโs resignation, stated it did not โsolve the Churchโs profound failure over safeguarding and the ongoing traumaโ for victims. She has called for a cultural shift in the Church to prioritise protecting the vulnerable over its own reputation.
The Bishop of Winchester, Rt Revd Philip Mounstephen acknowledged the โappalling abuseโ suffered by victims in his diocese under John Smyth. Expressing sadness over Welbyโs resignation, he praised his โimmense leadershipโ and stressed the need to make โGodโs church as safe as it can be.โ
Former General Synod member, journalist and campaigner Gavin Drake says Archbishop Justinโs resignation โwill NOT make the Church of England a safe placeโ but will prevent others from being held to account, with โwoefulโ safeguard structures that operate to protect its reputation.
Rt Rev Stephen Conway, Bishop of Lincoln, who was also named in the Makin report for failing to act decisively on Smyth-related abuse cases, stated he is โdeeply sorryโ for not pressing Lambeth โmore rigorouslyโ after reporting the claims in 2013.
Rt Rev Gill Duff, Bishop of Lancaster, told Premier Christian News that the Church lacks โclear governance and responsibilityโ in handling safeguarding, adding that she believes โGod is waking up the Church of England.โ
Sam Wells, vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields and close friend of Welby, praised his โdignity and selflessness,โ calling it tragic that the career of โa person of singular faith, courage, humility, and integrityโ should end this way. Wells is married to Bishop Jo Bailey Wells, who was also mentioned in the Makin report regarding a police investigation.
The Church of Englandโs lead bishop for safeguarding, Rt Rev Joanne Grenfell, Bishop of Stepney, highlighted the โretraumatising effectsโ of the Makin report on survivors, emphasising that โthe responsibility for good safeguarding in the Church of England lies with every one of us.โ
On X, Krish Kandiah expressed that Welbyโs resignation was necessary, and he was โdeeply gratefulโ for Welbyโs โstrong, principled stance against the harmful Rwanda immigration dealโ and his passion for sharing the good news of Jesus.
Gavin Calver, CEO of the Evangelical Alliance, posted on X that he is โpraying for the Anglican Church” and asked the Lord to โheal hurts, right wrongs, bring reconciliation, and raise up the right person to take on this strategic and profoundly challenging role”.