CTindex - Christian Today UK Interactive Catalogue
Comments

Dr Nigel G. Wright: Dividing up the Monarchy

Posted: Thursday, August 24, 2006, 19:13 (BST)
Font Scale:A A A

I can confidently predict that at some point in the next twenty years the United Kingdom is going to need a new monarch. The timescale is a cautious one, to be sure, but then the Queen Mother did live to a ripe old age and the present Queen shows every sign of being in robust good health.

Nonetheless the day will come when like the rest of us she will expire. Since most of us can’t remember a time when she was not, it’s likely to be quite dramatic for all of us (or for those still alive), but not least for the Church of England.

Strangely, it had not struck me until recently just what an important figure the Queen is for the C of E. I had understood that she is the Church’s Supreme Governor, of course, but had not grasped the extent to which she is for Anglicans a sacred personage, a person of religious significance. It seems that faint echoes of that ancient doctrine ‘the divine right of kings’ can still be heard.

When Henry VIII found it convenient to break with Rome he in effect replaced the Pope as the Church of England’s highest authority. Initially he and his immediate successors were styled ‘Head of the Church’ but as there is already a claimant to that position the language was moderated to ‘Supreme Governor’. From the Reformation the monarch has held a dual role as both a civil and temporal governor and a religious and spiritual one. Elements of the Pope’s role, which is (for Catholics) undeniably a sacred one were continued into the monarch’s, constituting him or her a sacred figure attracting religious devotion.

It is not for nothing then that at the coronation of a monarch the ceremony takes place in a cathedral and is dripping with religious language and imagery. The monarch is anointed in her office, as were the kings of Israel, and given symbols of both spiritual and temporal rule. Neither is it for nothing that bishops, who used to be thought of as princes of the church, have to swear a vow of personal loyalty to the monarch’s own person.

Indeed, there is almost a mystical dimension to the devotion given to the monarch in the Church she governs. Occasionally when senior and clued-up Anglicans talk you catch a hint of it, a hint which is also evident in the cult of ‘Charles King and Martyr’. This sustains the memory of a former monarch who really did believe in the divine right of kings and acted arbitrarily and tyrannically as a consequence. Getting his head chopped of by a group of angry Puritans constituted him for at least some Anglicans a holy martyr to the cause.



continue to read > 1 | 2

Copyright © 2009 Christian Today. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
The opinions expressed above may not reflect the views or opinions of Christian Today.

Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here
Gospel For Asia
World Headline
No end to 'misery' in Congo, warns aid agency

No end to 'misery' in Congo, warns aid agency

The people of Congo face hunger and disease as fighting continues between the government and rebel forces.
Sponsored Features
Enrich your love life, marriage and relationships through education and counselling. Train to become a certified marriage and family educator and change lives for good.
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here