Articles, Interviews & Speeches
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- Archbishop - Religious Faith and Human Rights
- The Spiritual and the Religious: Is the Territory Changing?
- Archbishop's Easter Message
- Archbishop's Holy Week Lecture: Faith & History
- Holy Week: Faith and History Questions & Answers Session
- Archbishop's Holy Week Lecture: Faith & Politics
- Holy Week: Faith & Politics Questions & Answers Session
- Archbishop's Holy Week Lecture: Faith & Science
- Holy Week: Faith and Science Questions & Answers Session
- 'Risen Indeed': The Resurrection in the Gospels
- Questions & Answers: 'Risen Indeed', the Resurrection in the Gospels
- 'Risen Today': The Resurrection as Good News Now
- Questions & Answers: 'Risen Today', the Resurrection as Good News now
- Archbishop speaks to Scientists at Sanger Institute
- Faith in the Future
- 'Faith, Reason and Quality Assurance - Having Faith in Academic Life'
- 'Faith, Reason and Quality Assurance - Having Faith in Academic Life' Questions & Answers Session
- 'What Difference Does it Make?' - The Gospel in Contemporary Culture
- What Difference Does it Make? - The Gospel in Contemporary Culture Questions & Answers Session
- Archbishop introduces Professor Bernard McGinn
- Archbishop's farewell tribute to Bishop of Truro
- Archbishop's farewell tribute - Bishop of Sheffield
- The Archbishop's Speech on Gambling, at the General Synod
- Presidential Address to the opening of General Synod
- Archbishop's Lecture - Civil and Religious Law in England: a Religious Perspective
- Archbishop's lecture - Religious Hatred and Religious Offence
- Archbishop's Holocaust Memorial Day Statement
- Archbishop's Liverpool lecture: Europe, Faith and Culture
- 2007 speeches archive
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2005 speeches archive »
- Archbishop of Canterbury's New Year Message »
- Archbishop on 'Pause for Thought' - Terry Wogan Radio 2
- Transcript of radio contribution given for a Fresh expressions feature on the BBC local radio circuit
- Archbishop - 'Christmas tells us why people matter'.
- General Synod - London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's contribution during the debate on The Review of Clergy Terms of Service: property issues and progress report
- General Synod London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop of Canterbury's farewell tribute to the Bishop of Oxford, the Rt Revd Richard Harries
- General Synod London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's Presidential Address
- General Synod London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's speech moving the Loyal Address
- General Synod, London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's contribution during the presentation on 'Episcopacy in the Church of England'
- General Synod London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's remarks at opening session
- General Synod London Sessions, 15-16 November 2005 Archbishop's contribution in debate on terrorism
- Temple Address: "Becoming Trustworthy: Respect and Self-Respect" Church House
- 'Religion culture diversity and tolerance - shaping the new Europe': address at the European Policy Centre, Brussels
- One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church
- Archbishop on 'Pause for Thought' - Terry Wogan Radio 2
- David Nicholls Memorial Lecture: 'Law, Power and Peace: Christian Perspectives on Sovereignty' - The University Church of St Mary the Virgin, Oxford
- Forum debate: Is Europe at its end? Sant'Egidio International Meeting of Prayer for Peace - Palais de Congress, Lyons
- Address at opening ceremony Sant'Egidio International Meeting of Prayer for Peace - Palais de Congress, Lyons
- 'The gifts reserved for age: perceptions of the elderly' A lecture to mark the Centenary of Friends of the Elderly, Church House, Westminster
- Presidential Address - General Synod, York
- Radio 4 'Thought for the Day' after London Terrorist bombs
- Archbishop's Presidential Address 13th Meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council, Nottingham 18-28 June 2005
- The Media: Public Interest and Common Good: lecture delivered at Lambeth Palace
- 'The Mission for L'Arche Today' - Address at L'Arche International Federation Meeting, Assisi, Italy
- Speech given at a reception at the conclusion of the 4th Building Bridges Christian-Muslim Dialogue
- Christianity, Islam and the Challenge of Poverty Bosniak Institute, Sarajevo
- Formation: Who's bringing up our children?
- Archbishop's Thought for the Day on Radio 4
- An Easter Message to the Anglican Communion
- Lecture at Chatham: Sustainable Communities
- Lecture: Ecology and Economy - University of Kent, Canterbury
- General Synod: Speech in debate on the environment
- General Synod: Speech in debate on the Windsor Report
- General Synod: Speech in Take Note debate on the theology of Women in the Episcopate
- General Synod: Speech Moving Motion on Women in the Episcopate
- General Synod: Speech Moving Motion on Women in the Episcopate
- Address by the Archbishop of Canterbury on the occasion of the installation of the Revd Canon Kenneth Kearon as Secretary General of the Anglican Communion, Anglican Communion Office London
- 2004 speeches archive
- 2003 speeches archive
- 2002 speeches archive
Archbishop of Canterbury's New Year Message
Saturday 31 December 2005
It's not easy being on your own in a city anywhere; and being on your own in London is pretty challenging. There are all kinds of reasons for people being on their own, of course. Look around here, at this club and drop-in centre in Deptford, and you'll find young people with issues around drugs and employment and homelessness – but you'll also find older people, who've been widowed, or who've been seriously ill, or who've just lost the energy for the struggle in one way or another. The issues are so varied and so deep-rooted. You're bound to ask, 'Just how much can anybody do for anyone else'?
But this isn't a place where you expect to chalk up a series of dramatic success stories. Those who work here will tell you that the point isn't to solve the problems but chiefly to say to everyone who comes through the door that they don't have to face them alone. They're trying to close the gap that so readily opens up between people. They have realised that at times the most we can do for each other is to say, 'I can't promise to keep you safe, but I'll do all I can to make sure that there's someone with you in the worst moments.
When disasters and tragedies come on us thick and fast – and this last year has seen so many horrors of suffering, natural and man-made – it's painful to accept that we can't just do something straight away to set it all right. So we need to see that the one thing anyone can do is to try and close the gap, to let others know that they're not on their own.
It can be done in the smallest act of recognition – a word or two on the street to a Big Issue seller, an Amnesty card to a political prisoner somewhere. It can be done in the routine work of a drop-in centre, exchanging a few words, making a cup of tea; just telling people that they're worth spending time with.
We're used to hearing it said that the world is growing smaller. Communications make us more aware of what's happening, and travel possibilities mean that it may be our friends and families who are involved in some disaster on the other side of the world. This time last year, there were so many anxious families waiting for news of friends and relatives in the wake of the tsunami. This autumn, so many Indian and Pakistani families in this country had to face the same anxiety about their relatives back in the earthquake area.
Communications make the gap grow narrower in some ways. The challenge for us is to close the gap in our awareness and our readiness to be there alongside the lonely and suffering. And of course, part of the Christmas message is not that God solves all our problems at a single stroke, but that through Jesus he is completely alongside us and has enough resources to see us through whatever happens. The Bible reminds us too that when one part of a body is in pain it's the whole person who feels it. When you have a toothache, it isn't the tooth that feels the misery, it's you. If anyone is living less than a proper human life, we're all poorer for it. We're all involved already, like it or not
Whether it's our neighbours on the streets of Deptford or our neighbours in Pakistan or India or Sri Lanka or Central Africa, what we can all do is to try and close the gap that little bit further: to let people know that they're not suffering alone. We still have to look for the big solutions, the long-term aid and support, the problem-solving plans. But let's start with what anyone can do, anywhere; never mind the success, simply act and speak as if people were worth taking seriously.
In this New Year, may you be aware of the God who closes the gap between his life and yours through his love; and may you be spurred on to do what you can to close the gaps between people by your compassion and courage.
© Rowan Williams 2005

