When heresy is accepted in the Church of England
Posted on February 16, 2018
Filed under Culture wars, Opinion, Theology
“If one is to claim that a certain teaching is heretical, we need to be clear what we mean by the term.
Alister McGrath writes, ‘Heresy arises through accepting a basic cluster of Christian beliefs – yet interpreting them in such a way that inconsistency results. A heresy is thus an inadequate or deficient form of Christianity. By its very deficiency, it poses a threat to the Gospel.’ The reason why heresy gains traction in the church is because it contains at least an element of truth; as such it is parasitic on orthodoxy. ‘In the Catholic faith, we recognise that a heresy is not so much a false doctrine as an incomplete doctrine. It has rejected part of the truth and is representing what is left over as the whole truth. But what a heretic usually ends up doing is attacking the greater truth.’
Jayne Ozanne illustrates this well.
In July 2017, Ozanne placed a private member’s motion to the General Synod meeting in York (GS 2070A) calling upon the Synod to effectively repudiate the practice of conversion therapy for those who experience same sex attraction. …”
– Melvin Tinker takes a sobering look at a very important topic.
Top image from Jayne Ozanne’s persuasive speech at the Church of England General Synod, 8th July 2017. (Youtube.) How persuasive was it?
See the voting result for the Private Member’s Motion.
The full text of the Private Members Motion may be found here.