Anglicanism is a quiet faith

Prince William was confirmed into the Anglican  Church at 14. Princess Catherine followed  before her marriage.

I see nothing wrong with the Prince expressing a quiet faith and attending Church mainly on the great civic and religious occasions.

One of the best features of the Anglican settlement was the decision not to make windows into men’s souls. The Church allows worshippers to develop  their own faith and understanding aided by the radical ability to read the scriptures in English for one’s self, first granted in the 1530s. This was  in contrast to the latin texts and priest led interpretations of Catholicism.

All this matters because when Prince William becomes King he becomes Head of the Church. He should not be cross examined about his faith and doctrine, as the Archbishop is the spiritual leader. She does need to explain her beliefs and offer a faith that others may choose to follow.

I do not think this would be a wise or good time to dis establish the Church given the cultural wars around us. The Prince by saying he is a Christian but not  a zealot or weekly attender of Church will in those respects be very representative of modern Anglicans  and many Christians in the UK.

Some of the leading  clerics could help by talking more of faith and God and less of social and benefits policy. The Church of England has lost a lot of conservative support by appearing to be the Green and  Lib Dem parties in the pulpit, equating morality with higher public spending. Their lobbying nearly always assumes economic and moral problems in society can be resolved by government intervention and by more taxes and public spending.

When an MP who started out sympathetic to the Anglican Church I had to deal with many emails from clerics complaining about social and welfare policy and siding with the Lib Dems and organised email campaigns. They never wrote to me about the Anglican settlement and never mentioned God or Christ in their correspondence. They were often badly informed about economic policy, wealth distribution, progressive taxation and welfare where they often wished to condemn before understanding the data and the basis for the policy.They usually recommended policies that would have increased unemployment and slowed growth, as Labour has proved by increasing spending, taxes and borrowing on taking office,

6 Comments

  1. Peter Gardner
    March 23, 2026

    The Anglican Church has really lost its way. It started in the 60s when, as a consequence, I left it and became non-Conformist. One of the best Christian cleric speaking about today’s issues is Dr Gavin Ashenden. He is Roman Catholic. I have fundamental disagreements with (and some dreadful experiences with) the RC Church but I respect it for not bending to wokery and fashionable trends as has the Anglican church.
    You haven’t mention King Charles but he is part of the problem. I was appalled when he changed the coronation oath to be defender of faith, meaning all faiths, and the Church allowed him to do so. Only a man with a ouija board could believe two contradictory faiths at the same time (pace F. Scott Fitzgerald). Elizabeth II was, sad to say, England’s last Christian monarch

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  2. Donna
    March 23, 2026

    Anglicanism has morphed from Christianity into yet another “woke” left-wing, Globalist branch of the Establishment. I was brought up in the Methodist Church since my late mother and her siblings had been evacuated to live with a Methodist Lay Preacher during the war and he became her surrogate father for most of her childhood. Even the generally left-leaning Methodist Church of my childhood in the ’60s and ’70s wasn’t as extreme as the current C of E.

    We are going to need a far more muscular strand of Christianity to defend this nation from an attempted Islamist takeover, as demonstrated by the (disgraceful) recent examples of Muslim intimidation in Trafalgar Square and elsewhere.

    Bishop Ceirion Dewer appears to have both the necessary faith and cojones.
    https://anglicanmainstream.org/article/open-letter-to-his-majesty-king-charles-iii/

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  3. Lynn Atkinson
    March 23, 2026

    I am happy for the heir and his wife to be ‘quiet’ Christians.
    It will be an improvement on the current situation.
    I hope they will desist from stunts: dressing up and attending the religious events of other faiths.
    I hope they will desist from attending on the Pope with the Queen dressed from head to toe in black!

    I am very unhappy with the religious leaders of the Church of England.
    Our great churches and cathedrals are for our Protestant church exclusively.
    If a Roman Catholic enters a Protestant church, it always was that they were thereby automatically excommunicated.

    It is claimed that anywhere the Adhān is performed is a declaration of spiritual authority over the space where it is proclaimed for all time, whether that be St George’s Hall, Trafalgar Square or Bristol Cathedral.

    Our Protestant religious leaders should know that. Something must be done!

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  4. Lifelogic
    March 23, 2026

    “They usually recommended policies that would have increased unemployment and slowed growth, as Labour has proved by increasing spending, taxes and borrowing on taking office” Indeed well logic as we know is no a stand point of religious leaders and believers nor of the Labour Party. The tend to work mainly with envy and irrational emotions and assume they can access load of other people’s money to waste usually doing net harms. Look at the drivel our unelected Bishops in the Lords endlessly come out with.

    I certainly was an atheist well before I left primary school. I was in a CofE Choir in a reasonable northern church choir (which I very much enjoyed and gave me a love of music and improved my football skills before and after -but listening to all the sermons and lessons certainly confirmed my atheism.

    I was particularly amused by the “thanks to the Lord for saving” say 2 children buried for days under a building following an earthquake & yet never blaming him for the earthquake itself that killed another 5000+ or not rescuing these people. Still as the vicars do like to say “God moves in mysterious ways his wonders to perform” – this when they cannot find anything more sensible to say.

    Reply
    1. Lifelogic
      March 23, 2026

      “Not a strong point” rather!

      Reply
  5. Peter
    March 23, 2026

    Anglicanism originated as a means for Henry VIII to get divorced. It was more a practicality than a great difference of belief, as in other ruptures on the continent.

    The more fervent types split over time. Wesleey and his followers became Methodists. They split too with Primitive Methodism.Then they reunited.

    Some Anglicans returned to Catholicism after the Oxford Movement. Meanwhile all manner of Protestant sects were set up, usually without clergy.
    .
    As faith dwindled.there have been pressures for the Church of England to reflect the zeitgeist – or even worse the political principles of the main parties. Anglicans in other parts of the world, notably Africa, are unhappy with this and may break away and become independent.

    Neither the present king nor his son are particularly religious. This is awkward as the king is supposed to be the head of the church. The prince’s words are probably fence building before he comes to the throne.

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