13
November 1935 A.D. George
Carey Born—103rd of 105 Archbishops of Canterbury
Editors.
“George Carey.” Encyclopedia Britannica. 2
Apr 2013. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/95722/George-Carey. Accessed 13 Jun 2014.
George Carey, in
full George Leonard Carey, Baron Carey of Clifton
(born Nov. 13, 1935, London, Eng.), archbishop of Canterbury from 1991 to 2002, theologian noted
for his evangelical beliefs.
Carey left school
at age 15 and served as a radio operator in the Royal Air Force from 1954 to
1956. By 20 he had undergone a religious conversion—not Paul’s experience on
the road to Damascus, he admitted, but the simple conviction that he had found
something special. He was then admitted to King’s College, London University,
from which he received a bachelor of divinity degree in 1962. Beginning his
clerical career as a curate in Islington (1962–66), Carey was also a lecturer
at Oakhill College in Southgate (1966–70) and at St. John’s College in
Nottingham (1970–75). He was vicar of St. Nicholas Church in Durham (1975–82)
and principal of Trinity College, Bristol (1982–87). In 1987 Carey was made bishop of Bath and Wells, and in 1990 he
was named to succeed as archbishop of Canterbury.
As archbishop,
Carey faced several controversial issues. Most notably, he supported the ordination of women in the church and declared that those opposed to it were
heretics. The church also wrestled with the ordination and marriage of homosexuals,
which Carey opposed. He spoke in support of the war in Afghanistan following
the terrorist attacks on the United States in September 2001, but he also
called for a dialogue between Christians and Muslims. He announced his
retirement in 2002, and Rowan
Williams, archbishop of Wales, was appointed
as his successor. That year Carey was created a life peer as Baron Carey of
Clifton.
He wrote a number
of books, including I Believe in Man (1975), God Incarnate (1976), The
Gate of Glory (1986), The
Message of the Bible (1988), and The
Archbishop of Canterbury’s Millennium Message
(2000).
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