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Legal Implications of Lambeth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Eric Kemp
Affiliation:
Bishop of Chichester
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

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I hope that I shall have the sympathy of the Society in attempting to respond to a request to speak about the legal implications of a body which had no standing in canon, ecclesiastical, civil or common law. The Lambeth Conference was a gathering of persons individually invited by the Archbishop of Canterbury to meet him for three weeks in the University of Kent at Canterbury. Finance for the meeting came from a number of corporate bodies but none of them had any control over what happened. The Archbishop had asked a number of persons to assist him in the organisation of the meeting but the ultimate control of it was in his hands, subject to the willingness of those who were there to fall in with what was proposed. During the last week of the meeting some seventy resolutions were passed, but none of them, with one possible exception, has any legal effect of any kind.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 1989