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Geoffrey Fisher was a British clergyman who served as the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1945 to 1961. His leadership during a time of significant social change in Britain was marked by his efforts to modernize the Church of England and address contemporary issues. Fisher's tenure was influential in shaping the church's role in post-war British society.
"In a civilized society, all crimes are likely to be sins, but most sins are not and ought not to be treated as crimes. Man's ultimate responsibility is to God alone."
"The long and distressing controversy over capital punishment is very unfair to anyone meditating murder."
"Who knows whether in retirement I shall be tempted to the last infirmity of mundane minds, which is to write a book."
"I hope that by going to visit the pope I have enabled everybody to see that the words Catholic and Protestant, as ordinarily used, are completely out of date. They are almost always used now purely for propaganda purposes. That is why so much trouble is caused by them."
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