Icon (Close Menu)

Ghanian King Visits Lambeth

The Archbishop of Canterbury welcomed the King of the Ashanti Kingdom in Ghana to Lambeth Palace August 1.

His Excellency Otumfuo Nana Osei Tutu II, who is an Anglican, is on a private visit to the United Kingdom and requested an official visit with Archbishop Justin Welby.

The king, who was greeted by Ghanaian drummers and dancers, was accompanied by senior chiefs and the Ghanaian High Commissioner, H.E. Victor Emmanuel Smith.

In a welcome speech the archbishop said the king’s visit to Lambeth Palace was not just a great honor but also “a symbol of reconciliation.”

Having made much progress toward reconciliation in the aftermath of colonialism, he said, Ghana’s political and traditional leaderships have made it “one of the beacons of Africa” and “a shining hope for the future.”

Read the rest.

WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

Top headlines. Every Friday.

MOST READ

CLASSIFIEDS

Most Recent

Welby Apologizes for ‘Frivolous’ Farewell Speech

Noting that “heads had to roll,” in response to the Church of England’s safeguarding problems, he compared himself to a predecessor, whose head literally rolled down Tower Hill after being struck off during the Peasant’s Revolt in 1381.

Proposals Call for Decentering Canterbury’s Role in Anglican Communion

IASCUFO's Nairobi-Cairo Proposals suggest a “narrow revision” of the 1930 Lambeth Conference’s classic description of the Communion that decenters the phrase “in communion with the See of Canterbury,” as well as a term-limited, rotating presidency for the Anglican Consultative Council.

Most Part-Time Clergy Love Their Life

If part-time status is conducive to thriving in ministry, then the Episcopal Church could be on track for a bumper crop of healthy, happy priests.

Jesus and the Great O Antiphons

The “Great O Antiphons” are liturgical texts, nearly as ancient as the creed, which apply seven metaphors from Jewish tradition to Christ.