The Archbishop of Canterbury has tested positive for Covid-19 and has also been suffering with mild pneumonia since last week. He will therefore not be preaching at the Service of Thanksgiving for The Queen’s reign at St Paul’s Cathedral on Friday this week.The Archbishop (see photo, left) was diagnosed with mild pneumonia on Thursday last week and, under medical advice, was continuing to work but with a reduced schedule to allow for rest and recovery. However after developing symptoms over the weekend the Archbishop tested for coronavirus this morning and confirmed he has Covid-19.Following medical advice and national coronavirus guidance, the Archbishop is resting at home and avoiding contact with others, and has cancelled all engagements this week.Lambeth Palace has informed Buckingham Palace of this news and conveyed the Archbishop’s regret that he will not be able to participate in the service. The Archbishop of York, the Most Revd Stephen Cottrell (see photo, right), will instead preach the sermon in his place.The Archbishop was also due to light a beacon at Lambeth Palace on Thursday evening as part of The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee Beacons events. The Lambeth Palace beacon will be lit on the Archbishop’s behalf instead so that Lambeth Palace can still participate in these celebrations.The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Revd Justin Welby, said today: “I am deeply saddened to be missing the historic celebration of Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. However, I will be praying for The Queen and giving thanks for her extraordinary seventy years of service to us all. I will also be praying for our nation at this time of celebration and thanksgiving. May The Queen’s example bring us together in unity and care for one another.“For those attending Friday’s service at St Paul’s Cathedral, and the millions watching on television, I hope this joyful occasion will inspire us with The Queen’s profound commitment to fostering unity and peace among all people – and to promoting care for the natural world that God has given us. Led by the love of Jesus Christ, The Queen has lived her life for the benefit of others: l pray we find inspiration from Her Majesty over the Jubilee weekend and long into the future.“Meanwhile as we continue to live with coronavirus, I pray too for all those who are still suffering and everyone who continues to mourn loved ones they have lost during the pandemic. May you each know the love and comfort of God.”“As we prepare to celebrate the first Platinum Jubilee in our nation’s history, may God save The Queen, and bless her with the knowledge of our profound love and gratitude for her service to us all.”
Our joint parish Holy Communion service on Sunday is at St Mary and All Saints' Church, Dunsfold at 10am. We hope you can join us.If you're elsewhere, or housebound, you can join us online by clicking on the following Zoom link.https://us02web.zoom.us/j/5253921788?pwd=MC9kNmpldmFrRSsrV1pkc1k5aU1vZz09
PLANS are under way to set up a Church of England housing association to provide social housing on church-owned land across the dioceses.In February of last year, the Archbishops’ Commission on Housing published its report, Coming Home, which described as “a national scandal” the fact that eight million people in England live in overcrowded, unaffordable, or unsuitable homes (News, 26 February 2021).On Tuesday, members of the Commission, Church Commissioners, and other leaders met online to review progress on the recommendations in the report, which included using some of the 200,000 acres of land owned by the Church for social and environmental benefit.The Archbishop of Canterbury told the meeting that a radical approach was needed. “The housing crisis is getting worse rather than better because of high levels of inflation and very rapidly rising levels of poverty, with incomes rising far below the level of inflation, and the likelihood of recession — all these have put enormous pressure on housing,” he said. “If you are building a more just society, housing is one of the main building blocks.”The First Church Estates Commissioner, Alan Smith, said that church pilot schemes were key to this. The Commissioners were building 30,000 new homes on 60 sites across England; fewer than one third, 9000 homes, would be affordable, however. He said: “We want to start digging beneath that — truly affordable — and begin to push into areas of affordable housing where there is a big gap, and where the truly vulnerable are not being served right now.”Church land was not enough, however, the Bishop of Chelmsford, Dr Guli Francis-Dehqani (see photo), who is the lead bishop for housing, said. “This degree of social change . . . requires more land and buildings than we currently have, and it needs to be deliverable to every part of the country. If we only develop housing on the land we currently own, we’ll never bring about the justice we long to see; nor will it be enough to turn the tide of the current housing crisis.“That’s why we are proposing to set up a Church Housing Association which will enable us to deliver housing, social change, and ministry funding beyond the realms of our existing inheritance into more marginalised areas where the need is greatest.”