The Anglican Communion, trying to hold itself together in Dar-es-Salaam, is like the Commonwealth. Indeed, it exists for the same reason — the inheritance of the British Empire. Like the Commonwealth, it began as a white-dominated organisation, and has gradually ceased to be so. The Episcopal Church of the United States stands in relation to the Communion as white South Africa stood to the Commonwealth 50 years ago. Its insistence on pursuing its own obsessive doctrine — in this case, the ordination and marriage of practising homosexuals, in South Africa’s case, apartheid — isolates it from its fellows, particularly its black fellows. In the middle, in both cases, stands England, home of residual authority, trying to provide a focus of unity, but lacking decisive power. The result, in South Africa’s case, was that it had to leave the Commonwealth, and returned when it finally accommodated itself to the demands of the black majority.
Charles Moore
The Spectator’s Notes | 24 February 2007
The Anglican Communion and the Commonwealth exist for the same reason — the inheritance of the British Empire
issue 24 February 2007
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