Why is the Church of England planning a formal “act of repentance” to apologise to the Jewish community for the expulsion of Jews in 1290?

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There are many facets to this. Anne’s response and answer has shown why what happened in 1222 is regarded as deplorable and why the Church of England might wish to make some gesture or statement deploring it. If I understand OP's question correctly, she asks why, granted that the Church wishes to deplore what happened in 1222, should it do so in the form of an apology, rather than in the form of a condemnation.

Apologising for something that one had no personal responsibility for, and which happened before any person involved in the apology was even born, is anyway questionable. It involves members or representatives of a contemporary group dissociating themselves from the conduct of past members, perhaps a nation apologisng for an attrocity or a once privileged group for discrimination.

The premise of OP's question is that the Church of England cannot dissociate itself from anything that happend before 1534, because the Church of England did not exist until then. The answer to this conundrum is that the Church of England, in general, does not accept that it only came into existence in 1534.

So what did happen in 1534? The Act of Supremacy was passed by the English Parliament. This stated that Henry VIII and his heirs be taken, accepted and reputed the only supreme head on earth of the Church of England called Ecclesia Anglicana...any..foreign authority..to the contrary notwithstanding.

The Convocations (bodies consisting of bishops and representatives of clergy) had already agreed this in 1531.

England (bishops, clergy reps, lords, commons reps and king) was not creating a new entity, called the Church of England. It was declaring the king to be head of an already existing entity. In fact, it had already been illegal, since the 1300s, to assert or maintain papal jurisdiction in England.

There was complete continuity in the organisation before and after 1534. Countless English churches have boards listing the vicars since well before 1534 up to the present. After Henry VIII died the Church of England was reformed to become Protestant under the boy Edward VI. When he died his sister Mary brought it back into submission to Rome, but there was no concept of "abolishing" the Church of England or "reinstating" the Roman Catholic Church. It was seen as the healing of a schism between two parts of the church. When Mary died a new Act of Supremacy declared Elizabeth I and her heirs supreme governor, rather than head, of the Church of England. Her present Majesty, Elizabeth II, still holds this position.

Neither Henry VIII nor any of his contemporaries imagined that a new denomination was being founded. Indeed the concept of a denomination would be entirely alien to them. It was already known that there were countries e.g. Greece and Egypt, which did not acknowledge Rome. The extent of Papal jurisdiction was a constant ebb and flow throughout Europe across centuries. Even the Synod of Chester, aroud 600, had rejected Augustine's authority.

One would not say that Virginia did not exist until it declared itself independent of the British Empire, nor that the Greek Orthodox Church did not exist until 1056.

Dring the process of Reformation the Church of England dissociated itself from much. However neither the C of E nor Luther and Protestants generally dissociated themselves from anti-semitism.

So the "answer" is to reject the premise of the question, that the Church of England was founded in 1534 and has no continuity with the Ecclesia Anglicana. Roman Catholics might see it that way, but the Church of England generally does not.

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The history of religious persecution of Jews in Britain is truly horrible, and a shame and a reproach on the good name of Christ. However, I will not delve into that here, but provide a few links at the end. This question asks about Church of England thinking behind a planned “act of repentance” for 2022 (on the 800th anniversary of the Synod of Oxford, which passed laws restricting the rights of Jews, and which led to expulsions in 1290). That Synod long predated the formation of the Church of England in 1534.

An article by Tony Kusher on 16 July 2021 gives some answers to your question. He is James Parkes Professor of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations at the University of Southampton. One important, and current reason, is

“…a growing recognition within the Church of England that Christian anti-Judaism was a key, if not the only, cause of modern antisemitism. This was recognised as early as the 1920s by the radical Anglican clergyman James Parkes, who spent his whole career fighting for the Jews – before, during and after the Nazi era. Confronting the scale of violent, racial antisemitism in the university campuses of Europe during the 1920s, Parkes carried out deep research into the roots of this animosity.”

Kusher then quotes from Parkes’ 1969 autobiography. Then he refers to a 2019 Church of England document, “God’s Unfailing Word”, which

“accepts the pivotal work of Parkes in acknowledging that troubling legacy. In that sense, the apology is an extension of the 2019 document.”

That, in brief, is a main reason for the Church of England working towards the proposed “Act of Repentance”. The full article explaining all of this can be found at https://theconversation.com/the-church-of-england-is-apologising-for-medieval-antisemitism-why-now-164533

See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Expulsion#Planned_apology https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Expulsion#Expulsion https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Expulsion

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