"The words we use must speak the truth": Angela Tilby writes in the Church Times

 "Revolutions begin with an assault on language. Diocesan straplines, cute mission initiatives, the bullying insistence that there is no alternative — what is being rolled out in Truro, Leicester, and elsewhere starts with an assault on theology," writes Rev Angela Tilby in today's Church Times

"In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, the point of “newspeak” was to reduce the range of thought, and so to make certain realities impossible. So, not much hope for parish, priest, tradition, pastoral care, contemplation, or liturgy. The new language has taken over."

Click here to read the full article.

 

Angela Tilby, a writer, broadcaster and theological educator,  is a member of the national Save The Parish steering committee. After working for the BBC for over twenty years she was ordained in 1996 and taught at Westcott House in Cambridge. She was vicar of St Benet’s Cambridge for five years and then Diocesan Canon at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. Now retired she is a Canon Emeritus of Christ Church and a Canon of Honour at Portsmouth Cathedral.

 

 

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