Church Of England Group Wants To Call God A 'She'
The Church of England group that successfully campaigned to ordain female bishops is now fighting for greater gender inclusivity by saying God should be called both “he” and “she.”
Members of Women and the Church (WATCH) started shaking up the way Anglican church leaders talk about God by raising the issue in interviews with several UK outlets.
“When we use only male language for God we reinforce the idea that God is like a man and, in doing so, suggest that men are therefore more like God than women,” WATCH member Rev. Emma Percy, chaplain of Trinity College, Oxford, told The Sunday Times. “This means that women can see themselves as less holy and less able to represent Christ in the world. If we take seriously the idea that men and women are made in the image of God, both male and female language should be used.”
WATCH member Rev. Jody Stowell echoed Percy’s concerns, noting that despite teachings that God is a genderless figure, the church’s liturgy nearly exclusively refers to the creator with male pronouns and imagery.
âOrthodox theology says all human beings are made in the image of God, that God does not have a gender,” she told The Guardian. “He encompasses gender — he is both male and female and beyond male and female. So when we only speak of God in the male form, thatâs actually giving us a deficient understanding of who God is.”
Though WATCH blitzed the media with its campaign this weekend, Lindsay Llewellyn-MacDuff, chaplain to the Bishop of Rochester, first mused upon using dual pronouns for God in a WATCH blog post in March. Days later, the Church of England appointed its second female bishop, Rev. Canon Alison White. The first female bishop, Rev. Libby Lane, was appointed last December, one month after the church agreed to ordain women as bishops and 20 years after it began ordaining female priests.
Altering the church’s vocabulary requires clearing multiple hurdles.
A spokesman for Lambeth Palace, where the Archbishop of Canterbury offers WATCH a special meeting space, told the Daily Mail, “Any change in the formal liturgy of the Church of England would require consent, revision and final approval of the General Synod. Even prior to that point, there would need to be substantial consultation with the Liturgical Commission.”
Ann Widdecombe, a former member of Parliament who became a Catholic when the church began ordaining female priests, spoke out against WATCH’s latest movement.
“God clearly isnât a She as a She canât be a father,” she said, according to The Daily Mail. “This is plain silly, unbiblical and ridiculous. I think itâs the work of a few lunatics.”
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