Does no one in the Church of England dare oppose top cleric? Britain’s Independent suggests so

Nov 23, 2017 by

by Mark Kellner, Get Religion:

The Church of England and its leader, the Rt. Hon. and Most Rev. Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury, whom I’ve observed close up, command a sizeable presence in the global Christian world. Welby is front and center in a new controversy, guidelines for Church of England schools on how to treat transgender children.

But if one recent news story is to be taken at face value, no one in the Church of England could be found to go on record as disagreeing with some of these new pronouncements.

The journalism question is: How far did the newspaper in question go – or, perhaps, NOT go – to find an opposing voice.

Atop a large photo of Welby, we see how The Independent headlined the story: “Church of England tells schools to let children ‘explore gender identity.'” Let’s dive in:

Children should be able to try out “the many cloaks of identity” without being labelled or bullied, the Church of England has said in new advice issued to its 5,000 schools.

The Church said youngsters should be free to “explore the possibilities of who they might be” – including gender identity – and says that Christian teaching should not be used to make children feel ashamed of who they are. …

Guidance for Church of England schools on homophobic bullying was first published three years ago, and has now being updated to cover “transphobic and biphobic bullying” – which means bullying people who consider themselves to be either transgender or gender fluid.

However, as we’ll see in a moment, there are Christians in England, and, presumably, elsewhere, who might disagree with Welby’s endorsement, as reported. He condemned bullying, but then went further:

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