Indeed. The biblical rules for selecting clergy and heads of churches are quite strict so I did wonder if the Queen might force his abdication and the succession onto William for that reason. However, the counter argument goes that you also have to temper expectations against the reality that no one is perfect, and then hold that to the biblical precedent of repentence and grace to which he is prescribing to uphold. He is at the present married to his queen and one assumes not in other relationships. If King David, an adulterer and murderer, is held as the epitomy of biblical kings, with Jesus being of David's line, then you kind of get on a sticky wicket if you say the biblical king who earnestly repented could be forgiven in Christ but today's people cannot. Or to water it down to the pithy flim flam of too many modern clergy: "we all have to love and forgive." [vomit] Of course if he relapses or continues to get up to no good - that's where the problem is and he would need to step down. Though some of the clergy are so weak and compromised themselves they probably wouldn't even make him step down even then.