Tuesday, 1 December 2009

Marcus Loane and the diocese of Sydney

An interesting obituary of Marcus Loane, conservative evangelical Archbishop of Sydney, in the Telegraph. He is of interest since there is some research yet to be done on the international nature of Anglican evangelicalism, and there was a good deal of interaction between Sydney and evangelicals in Britain, involving Moore Theological College, of which Loane had been Principal. His episcopal ministry in Sydney spanned nearly 20 years from 1958.

Thursday, 20 August 2009

Overy's Morbid Age

I note the appearance of Richard Overy's new study of the period between the wars, mainly since it looks at the 'presentiment of impending disaster' which Overy sees as characterising the period. From the reviews, it seems that Archbishop Lang features among Overy's subjects. I haven't yet read it, but there is perhaps a particular type of Christian pessimism at that time which would certainly bear more investigation.
It is reviewed at length by Eric Hobsbawm in the London Review of Books.

Tuesday, 30 June 2009

The 'biker priest'

I note this recent obituary of Bill Shergold, the priest known for his ministry amongst bikers in the East End of London in the 1960s. It's an interesting little sidelight on the Church's reaction to social change and the 'problem' of youth culture.

Wednesday, 24 June 2009

Bishops in the Church of England

I note recent press coverage of the impending General Synod debate on reducing the number of bishops and other senior clergy, mainly (it appears) under pressure of mounting pension liabilities (see report in the Guardian yesterday). There are background papers and other information on the site of the diocese of Bradford, which is proposing the motion.

There is much interesting historical work left to be done on the process of 'managed decline' (at least in structural terms) in the last century; the church is more used to amalgamating parishes than dioceses (see the recent obituary of David Halsey, late Bishop of Carlisle in the Telegraph.)

Monday, 1 June 2009

Charles Taylor's 'A Secular Age'

Charles Taylor,
A Secular Age
Cambridge and London, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007
ISBN: 978-0-674-02676-6

[a review, first published in the Christianity and History Forum Bulletin, spring 2009; republished here by the kind permission of the Reviews Editor. ISSN: 1742-3007]

When at the half-way point through a book, one’s notes for a review cover 14 pages, it is clear that a simple summary of the work at hand will be near impossible. Charles Taylor has written a remarkable study of stunning range and ambition, which is sure to become essential reading for historians of Christianity from the late medieval period to the present day. It is a work partly of history, but also of philosophical theology of a non-systematic kind, with considerable elements of religious psychology and sociology; a blend that is quite sui generis.

His central concern is to provide an account of the advent of our present secular age, of the longest possible range. Most narratives of secularisation, Taylor contends, deal with the emptying of public space and institutions of explicit religious meaning, and with the measurable decline of professed religious faith and practice, as understood by the institutional churches. The intent of this study is to go further behind these analyses, and to examine a fundamental shift in what Taylor calls the “conditions of belief”. In pre-Reformation Europe it was simply impossible to conceive of self, society and cosmos without reference to God; no viable alternatives of philosophical atheism or exclusive humanism were to hand. In the early twenty-first century, no such option of “naive theism” is available; religious belief is simply one option in a field of epistemological choice. Taylor is unconvinced by the simple narrative in which modernity is made the single efficient cause of this shift to secularity. He equally firmly rejects what he calls “subtraction stories”; the notion that “science” gradually whittled away all the unnecessary accretions to leave mature, independent Man, who had all along been struggling to slough off the strait-jacket of religious belief and be free. Far from being simply a realisation of inherent human potential, the possibility of an exclusive humanism is in fact a genuinely innovative phase in human history. In an insight of great importance to the present debates occasioned by the work of Richard Dawkins and others, Taylor tellingly shows the apparently ‘scientific’ critique of religious belief to have a history and a set of presuppositions of its own.

Taylor’s method is to proceed by a series of roughly chronological essays on aspects of the change: there are examinations of, amongst many, the ‘disenchantment’ of the natural world, the growth of the public sphere and the impact of the First World War. Descartes and Edward Gibbon, Nietzsche and Mrs Humphrey Ward all make an appearance, and Taylor engages with scholars as diverse as Keith Thomas and Norbert Elias, Mircea Eliade and Steve Bruce. Whilst little of the narrative is based on primary research, almost every page holds some striking recasting of a familiar story, or a startling juxtaposition of hitherto unconnected themes. Taylor also has an eye for a phrase: neo-Stoicism ‘is the zig to which Deism will be the zag’ (117); the confidence of the eighteenth-century mind in its own progress is ‘the ratchet at the end of the anthropocentric shift.’ (289). Without making any secret of his own faith position, Taylor is generous to a fault towards almost all the positions he engages with, even when very far from his own.

If there is any criticism that may fairly be made of a study of such range, it is perhaps one of method. In his preface, Taylor excuses himself from providing an exhaustive account of the changes he describes; and rightly, since such an account would surely run into many volumes. At the same time, each of the essays has a marked centrifugal tendency; every assertion is subsequently qualified, and byways are noted, commented upon and set aside. It is in these asides that many of the most striking insights are contained. The price, however, is that the central argument sometimes recedes, almost to vanishing point. The study perhaps needed either to be a great deal longer, or considerably more concise; as it is, it is punishingly long, at nearly 800 pages of text. As a result, it may try the patience of readers, and is likely to defeat the majority of undergraduate students and perhaps many general readers. It would however be a shame if potential readers were deterred by the dimensions of the study, since it is a quite extraordinary work, and likely to be one of very great importance.

Tuesday, 26 May 2009

The State We're In

I note the most recent issue of Crucible: The Christian Journal of Social Ethics (April-June 2009), which has a set of essays on the present relationship of church and state in Britain, including one by Peter Hennessy.
Unfortunately, the journal seems to have no web presence at all, so I am unable to provide any links.

Thursday, 7 May 2009

Seeking a Role

I note the appearance of a new general survey of the period from 1951 to 1970 by Brian Harrison, which has some things to say about religious change (published by Oxford University Press). One of his organising motifs is apparently the strained negotiations between 'secularized materialism' and older values derived from the Christian past. It is reviewed very favourably by Peter Hennessy in the TLS, May 6th, and by Dominic Sandbrook in the Sunday Times.
See earlier post on Hugh McLeod's book on the Sixties.

Friday, 1 May 2009

John Rawls' religion

I note briefly this piece in the TLS (March 18th) on some early work by Rawls on Christianity and the nature of social organisation, and its imprint on his later work, even after his own loss of faith.

Although it is written in and about the US, there are some interesting parallels with the English situation in the early 1940s, in relation to thinking on issues of community and the individual. A longer version is to appear in Cohen and Nagel (eds), John Rawls: 'A brief Inquiry into the Meaning of Sin and Faith', to be published by Harvard.

Monday, 20 April 2009

The republic of entertainment

I note a suggestive article in March's edition of Prospect by Toby Mundy, in which he posits a competition between two cultural sensibilities in Britain in the last 25 years. The matter at stake is nothing less than 'what really matters in the world, and how it should be reported', and the church is seen as part of the 'enlightenment state' (as defined against the 'republic of entertainment') in which 'reason triumphs over emotion, experts matter, elected politicians are legitimate, facts are the enemy of cynicism, means are often as important as ends....' It ends with the suggestion that the recession might just see a new 'tide of seriousness.'

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

British Evangelical Identities

I'm bound to note the recent publication of this new book, edited by Mark Smith (Paternoster, 2009). It has several contributions of interest for the history of British evangelicalism in the twentieth century, on subjects as diverse as masculinity (Kristin Aune); women's ministry (Rachel Jordan); and church music (Ian Jones and myself).

Other contributors include David Bebbington, Ian Randall, Martin Wellings, David Killingray and Derek Tidball. Timothy Larsen suggests on the back cover that it 'could well be the most important book on British evangelicalism' since David Bebbington's survey, published in 1989.

Tuesday, 7 April 2009

Rowan Williams on Britishness

I note some (short) comments by the Archbishop on Matthew d'Ancona's programme on Britishness, taking in the question of the establishment. It should be broadcast again this evening on Radio 4 at 9.30.
It should also be available to listen again, along with an extended version of the interview.

Friday, 3 April 2009

Radio comedy

An interesting item on today's broadcast of Radio 4's Feedback programme, detailing a number of complaints received about perceived anti-Christian bias, in the week-day early evening comedy slot on Radio 4. Shows including The News Quiz, Old Harry's Game and The Now Show were mentioned.

The complaint was not that religion was a butt of jokes, but that Christianty came off worse than Hinduism or any other of the faiths. There was some recognition in the discussion that Christianity, as the (at least in theory) dominant faith might expect to be a easier target. I do wonder how much this has changed; my mind does go back to the controversy over the Life of Brian, now nearly three decades ago.

It should be available to listen again for another week from today, on the iPlayer service.

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

Rowan Williams on the memory of belief

I note recent reports of a speech given by Rowan Williams at Leicester Cathedral last month, describing Britain as 'haunted' by the memory of religion. It's difficult to comment on the excerpts given by the Telegraph, and the full text has not (as yet) appeared on the Archbishop's website. There was some brief mention of the rumpus last year over sharia law (see earlier post)

Tuesday, 24 March 2009

Bishops in the Lords

I note a recent piece from the Bishop of Portsmouth, making the case in favour of the bishops remaining in the House of Lords, in the Church Times.

Tuesday, 17 March 2009

Derek, Clive and Mrs Whitehouse

An interesting snippet on the newly released files from the DPP on Peter Cook and Dudley Moore's scatological Derek and Clive recordings in the Guardian, Monday 16th. It caught my eye since one complainant to the Home Office also sent a copy to Mary Whitehouse "who seems alone to be brave enough to stand up to public filth" - some sense here of the perceived importance of her campaigns, at least to some.
See my earlier post on last year's biopic on her.

Wednesday, 4 March 2009

Shortt on Williams

The debate continues about Rupert Shortt's biography of Rowan Williams, and by extension about the Archbishop himself. See a review on the moderate evangelical Fulcrum site, and ensuing discussion, almost all positive (at the time of reading.)
See also my earlier post on print reviews.

Sunday, 1 February 2009

Our Times

I note several reviews of A.N. Wilson's recent study Our Times. It has a number of things to say about the state of the "national church", and gives Michael Ramsey a particular pasting. See Dominic Sandbrook in the Guardian,
D.J. Taylor in the Independent and Piers Brendon in the Times, all of whom mention Wilson's sometimes sketchy grasp of the factual detail. John Campbell in the TLS (14/1/09) goes so far as to suggest that it "poisons the wells" for serious historical work. It is interesting, however, as an example of a particular type of conservative interpretation of the period.
[The problematic nature of Wilson's reference to a national church is noted by a letter to the TLS this week. For more on conservative narratives of the period, see my review of Hugh McLeod on the sixties.]

Wednesday, 14 January 2009

Crown appointment of bishops

The Church Times has handily published some correspondence from 1960 between the PM and his Appointments Secretary, relating to a series of impending episcopal appointments, including Michael Ramsey's move to Canterbury and Coggan's to York.
See David Stephens to Harold Macmillan, 7 September 1960: it may save someone a trip to the National Archives.

Thursday, 8 January 2009

Rowan's Rule

I note early review reactions to Rupert Shortt's new biography of Rowan Williams: from Anthony Howard in the Tablet, and A.N. Wilson in the TLS. Both are interesting for their passing reflections on the office of Archbishop.