The Archbishop invoked the Prayer of St Francis at evening prayer in Rome on the eve of his meeting with the Pope. Preaching at an ecumenical service with Cardinal Walter Kasper presiding, at the Oratory of St Francis Xavier, he gave a rare insight into the depths of the his own, personal, intense desire for unity, and continued warm relations with Rome. ‘As we pray for unity between Christians…whatwever we may be, Anglicans, Methodists, Roman Catholics, Armenian, Apostolic Orthodox whatever we may be, give us the Holy Spirit to bind us together, that we may meet one another’s hunger.’
He went on to reference the St Francis Prayer. (The relevant passage is towards the end, about eight minutes into the video.) And while he did not use this passage directly, the prayer has this line: ‘It is in pardoning that we are pardoned.’ Presumably, then, he’s forgiven the Pope. What seems to have been at issue is not so much what was done, as the way it was done. The announcement a couple of weeks ago, with little notice or preparation that he was aware of, left the Archbishop of Canterbury in a state of some discomfiture, not knowing how to respond.
Read it all and there is an accompanying video and numerous other links.