From England-
Central to the Church of England’s understanding of itself as the
established church is its vocation to be a “church of the nation” – a
public institution ready to bring a theological voice to the national
debates of the day. The trauma of Brexit confronts the four nations of
the United Kingdom in different ways but – given the centrality to the
debate of a resurgent English nationalism – it is most painful for England, which is where the Church of England’s mission is primarily directed.
Since 2016, several individual bishops, some in their capacity as “Lords Spiritual” have sought to contribute to this debate, often with balance and insight. Yet – unlike both the (Anglican) Scottish Episcopal Church and the (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland – the Church of England has so far been unable to bring any authoritative collective voice to the national conversation.
No debate on Brexit has taken place in General Synod (the Church of
England’s governing body), either before or since the 2016 referendum.
While the House of Bishops was able in 2015 to produce an unusually
substantial statement before the general election – Who is my Neighbour? – it has so far delivered no formal public statement on Brexit at all.
More here-
http://theconversation.com/the-church-of-england-needs-to-speak-out-about-brexit-heres-why-120384
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