"He said it would be inhuman not to question one's beliefs in the light of such evil."
Rubbish. Those are not the words of a man who has a personal relationship with the Lord.
Worse things than this have happened in history, and it would be supremely arrogant to think that God somehow would stop someone in this age from being as evil as other have been in the past.
Job questioned and was considered righteous throughout the ordeal, by God.
It MAY not be evil to question when the fiery furnaces come. But one must come, at the end of the testing, to the same place as Peter and David . . . to whom could we go, Lord, but You. And, wherever one is, the depths of the sea, the highest heavens, the pit of hell . . . wherever, there is God.
I do suspect that the Archbishop MAY have much more of an anemic faith than I'd think even an altar boy would have.
"He said it would be inhuman not to question one's beliefs in the light of such evil."
"Rubbish. Those are not the words of a man who has a personal relationship with the Lord."
Indeed. Those are the words of a secular Social Worker trying to express some kind of empathy he neither feels nor cares about, to people he neither knows nor understands, about an event of which he is clueless.
I know this phoney takes his "faith" so seriously he became a Druid. Does anyone know whether he actually believes in Jesus Christ as the incarnate Son?
Worse? As bad maybe but worse? I don't think so.