“Will nobody rid me of
this turbulent priest” cried Henry II shortly before some knights got the wrong
end of the stick and murdered Archbishop Thomas Beckett. I would imagine that
similar sentiments are being expressed in and around Westminster right now.
But the thing is, when
twenty seven Anglican bishops – including such heavy hitters as Mike Hill, the
Bishop of Bristol, Michael Perham, the Bishop of Gloucester and Alan Smith, the
Bishop of St Albans – a handful of Methodist chairs, representatives of the URC
and the Quakers and the now Cardinal
Archbishop of Westminster tell you that you are doing something wrong,
especially when it comes to something like benefit reform, it’s probably best
if you listen to them.
There is not one corner
or acre of this country that the Church does not cover. Wherever you live you
are in someone’s parish, and are someone’s responsibility, even if you have no
faith. And if you need help, you can count on the Church to at least do
something. To be honest, clergy know far more about the state of the country
and how the government’s policies have affected everyday people than the MPs do
themselves, and they are elected to know. Clergy are the ones down in the
trenches, day in day out, providing everything from spiritual care to food
banks. And with the floods the church has done even more to support their
communities. Just ask the Bishop of Truro.
So when Church leaders
tell you that the rise in the need for food banks is a sign that the
Government’s policies are having an adverse effect on the population they are
not just talking through their mitres. They know what they are talking about,
and rather than dismissing them and trying to write them off as interfering
busy bodies, the Government should listen to them, and maybe ask them what they
can do better.
It’s very rare that the
Church speaks out against the sitting government like it has this time. The
last time was, oddly enough, through the Faith in the City report during the
Margaret Thatcher era. What’s more, I don’t think Church leaders like getting
involved. They would rather focus on the work to which they are called than act
as a conscience to conscienceless governments. But that’s not the way it’s
worked out. So now the Church is having to take a stand.
I very much doubt that
the Coalition will listen. They think they know what they are doing, and they
will continue to ignore these meddlesome clergy until they go away. But what
they don’t understand is that they won’t go away. The Church in England has
been around since the end of the 6th century, while Parliament has
only been around in its present form since 1801. The Church is far older, it
has far more supporters, and if the Government thinks that by ignoring it, it
will just shut up and go away, then they are in for a very big surprise.
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