Tag Archives: faith and institutions

Why Catholicism May Endure — and Anglicanism May Become Something Else

A reflection on the Church of England’s quiet transformation — from spiritual authority to institutional survivor — and why Catholicism may endure as faith while Anglicanism persists as structure. Exploring assets, doctrine, conscience, and the possibility of a Church without dogma: shared meals, inward clarity, and compassion without hierarchy.

What happened at the Church of England’s General Synod today?

A Church that once shaped conscience now manages assets. As belief thins and process replaces meaning, the Church of England drifts toward becoming a heritage-backed investment body with a spiritual veneer. The Synod debates feel urgent, but the deeper story is structural: faith evaporates faster than property rights. What remains is an institution preserved by land and capital, while Christianity itself quietly returns to where it began — individual conscience.