Archbishop pays tribute to the Prime Minister
News from the
Archbishop of Canterbury - May 2007
Responding to the Prime Minister's recent
announcement that he will stand down from 27th
June, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan
Williams, made the following statement from Sri
Lanka:
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“Tony Blair has understood as well as
any Prime Minister in recent times why
religion matters, how faith communities
contribute to the common good and why
religious extremism should have no place
in a progressive society.
As a man of genuine personal faith, he
has not shied away from the risk
associated with confronting extremism,
while respecting difference.
|
The
Church of England, in common with all people of
faith, is grateful that over the past ten years
the Prime Minister has refused the demands of
some to close down the space in our society
within which both vigorous debate and the full
diversity of religious conviction can find voice
and be expressed.
There have naturally been differences of vision
and judgement between the Prime Minister and the
Church of England, not least over the Iraq war,
but he has been consistently willing to allow
these disagreements to be voiced and discussed
openly.
The
current development in Northern Ireland bears
witness to one of his most enduring achievements
and the high profile given to development
issues, especially in Africa, and to the
environmental crisis reflects the passion and
intelligence he has brought to his work as Prime
Minister.
I wish the Prime Minister well in the future,
whatever that holds for him, and I hope and pray
that his recognition of the contribution of
faith and faith communities to the common good
of our society will prove to be one of his most
enduring legacies; one that will be built on by
his successors."
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