... “It feels as though we are caught in a battle very few really want to be fighting; like soldiers in the trenches somewhere around 1916, trying to remember just what were the decisions that got everyone to a point where hardly anyone was owning the conflict ...
The Archbishop expressed his frustration at the intransigence of people on each side: the “virtual fundamentalism which simply declines to reflect at all about principles of interpretation” and the “cultural snobbery, content to say that we have outgrown biblical principles”.
“Whatever happened,” the Archbishop lamented, “to persuasion? To the frustrating business of conducting recognisable arguments in a shared language? It is frustrating because people are so aware of the cost of a long, argumentative process. It is intolerable that injustice and bigotry are tolerated by the Church; it is intolerable that souls are put in peril by doubtful teaching and dishonest practice. Yet one of the distinctive things about the Christian Church as biblically defined is surely the presumption (Acts 15) that the default position when faced with conflict is reasoning in council and the search for a shared discernment.”
The Church had been at fault, he said. “We should have done more on what it means to be a Catholic Church; we should have done more on the use of scripture.” In particular, mindful of the text of Lambeth 1.10, more should have been done to “offer a safe space” for homosexual people. “Again and again, we have used the language of respect for their human dignity; again and again, we have failed to show it effectively ...
http://www3.churchtimes.co.uk/content.asp?id=35574