Sunday, June 08, 2008

Government sidelines Christianity


The Government pays 'lip service' to Christianity and favours Islam and other minority religions, according to a report commissioned by the Church of England.

The damning study criticises the policies of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown for focusing 'intently' on minority beliefs whilst neglecting the Anglican faith.

It also accuses Labour of ignoring the breakdown in society and failing to recognise the Church's potential contribution to public affairs.

The report says: 'We encountered on the part of the Government a significant lack of understanding, or interest in, the Church of England's current or potential contribution in the public sphere

'Indeed we were told that Government had consciously decided to focus... almost exclusively on minority religions.'

The report calls for a 'Minster for Religion' to utilise the untapped reserves of volunteers in churches and charities and accuses the Government of 'religious illiteracy'.

It comes days after Dr John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, accused Gordon Brown of sacrificing liberty for misguided notions of equality and betraying New Labour's mantra of 'rights and responsibilities'.

The 180-page report, entitled 'Moral, But No Compass' shows how church leaders feel betrayed by the Government.

Mr Brown - who emphasised the strength of his 'moral compass' on becoming Prime Minister - is in particular likely to be stung by the title of the report.

The Government will find it hard to dismiss its findings as it represents the opinions of 70 Church of England bishops as well as more than 250 MPs, peers and academics.

In more bad news for Labour the study also praises the Conservatives for their 'strident' plans to tackle poverty.

This comments mark a change in the relationship between the Church and the Tories.

Relations have been strained since senior clergy blamed Margaret Thatcher for Britain's deepening spiritual decline in the 1980s.

The Bishop of Hulme, the Right Rev Stephen Lowe commissioned the The Von Hugel Institute at Cambridge to carry out the study

It was reported last night that the Archbishops of Canterbury and York are among those who have endorsed the findings.

However, a Church of England spokesman said church leaders have not yet seen the report and will respond on Monday when it is officially published.

The spokesman went on: 'The hard-hitting report raises issues of considerable importance, the authors say, and makes recommendations that challenge the Government to recognise the Churches' involvement and potential in public service reform.

'Authors Francis Davis, Elizabeth Paulhus and Andrew Bradstock will present their report to the Church on Monday when Bishop Stephen Lowe will respond.'

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

A government Minister for Religion?! isn't that the Archbishop of Canterbury!

nickbris said...

We could of course learn something from Islam.

They do tend to keep the family together,while we dump our "Old Folk" in nursing homes .

Anonymous said...

I think the Church of England are living on their own planet with this report's "findings".

Of course the UK Government are courting Islam. It`s the least they can do to bring the Muller-lites into the fold, whilst trying to isolate the Poltical Militants.

If the CofE want to be taken seriously, then how about they start engaging with the proper questions to do with truth: The Real Presence, The Sacraments and their power, By Whose Authority (i.e. Peter's)?

Instead they are on a self-destruct mission : women bishops, gay bishops and ultimately, I`m afraid, extinction.

How can the CofE, of all groups, claim that they are being side-lined in favour of Islam when their own Archbishop of C put forward a sympathetic case for Sharia Law recently ?

Physiocrat said...

Bernadette - Anglicanism covers a wide spectrum of beliefs and attitudes. A few eventually trickle into the Catholic Church. Others are near-atheists.

But the sidelining of Christianity in the UK is a sidelining of all Christianity. It is happening. And so-called progressive liberals, in reality sub-Marxists, hate Christianity and see Islam as OK, ignoring its extreme illiberality. To be seen as anti-Islam is to invite condemnation as a racist. That is how the public discourse goes in Britain.

Right wing racist groups are taking advantage of the way that the left is ignoring widespread public concerns and things will eventually turn nasty. Two more successful terrorist attacks would unleash people's fury. And the extremist Muslims are well aware of this. The situation is dangerous. Unfortunately, the quality of public debate in Britain is poor. Some newspapers follow the liberal line. Others are whipping up anti-immigrant sentiment. There is little balanced debate.

Anonymous said...

Yes, and if the Church was fulfilling it's mission (is my point), this would be kept in some kind of check.

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