In the News
-
News releases »
- Archbishop leads Praise by the Bridge - 10 year celebrations service
- Archbishop of York launches new national charity to help make a practical difference in local communities.
- General Synod Draft Legislation: Women in the Episcopate
- Director for Youth Trust appointed
- General Synod Draft Legislation: Women in the Episcopate
- Edinburgh 2010 - Closing Celebration
- Archbishop to Ordain Fourteen Candidates
- Archbishop's visit to the Diocese of Ripon and Leeds
- Welburn welcomes the Archbishop
- Archbishop officially opens 'The Lodge'
- Archbishop welcomes the Destiny Africa Children's Choir to Bishopthorpe Palace
- Archbishop visits the Diocese of Bradford
- Archbishop's disappointment over locked out voters
- 'Pray for Madeleine' says Archbishop
- Archbishop of York appoints Domestic Chaplain
- In pictures
- News archive
- Video
- RSS news feed
- Contact the media office
Archbishop's lecture 'Liverpool, where religious faith is part of the solution, not the problem'
Monday 09 June 2008
The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu today defended the right to believe and practise faith, stating that 'whenever we can agree to cooperate with each other for the common good- I want to be there'. He also welcomed the remarkable Von Hűgel Institute report 'Moral, but no Compass' published today.
Speaking at St. Georges' Hall, Liverpool, as part of a series of William Roscoe lectures, the Archbishop's address, entitled 'Liverpool, where religious faith is part of the solution, not the problem', focused on liberation, healing, empowerment and the spirit for the agenda of change for the common good.
The Archbishop criticised the term 'faith schools' and described the joint Anglican/Roman Catholic academies as examples of a grounded Christian faith at the heart of a diverse civic life.
The Archbishop said: "Here in Liverpool, you have been amassing strong evidence for the effectiveness of the engagement of the Churches with urban regeneration and civil society. You have been demonstrating over the years, from the days of Roscoe and continuing in so many ways today, that people of faith have a particular propensity to devote themselves to the common good, and that they have the ability, because of their faith, to 'move mountains' and make a difference, especially for the poor."
Referring to the Von Hűgel report, the Archbishop said: "the report urges us to sit up, take note and to better understand each other to make the most of one of this nation's most diverse, creative and enduring assets – The Church."
Notes to editors
Click to read the full text of the Archbishop's Roscoe Lecture.
Moral, But No Compass – Government, Church, and the Future of Welfare, by Francis Davis, Elizabeth Paulhus and Andrew Bradstock, Centre for the Study of Faith in Society at the Von Hűgel Institute, St Edmund's College, Cambridge University, is published by Matthew James Publishing Ltd, price £9.95p.
William Roscoe was a campaigner for the abolition of the Slave Trade. The Roscoe Lectures form part of a special series for Liverpool's European Capital of Culture 2008.

