Election advice reflects the failure of the Church of England

The best thing about the โ€œletterโ€ from the Anglican Bishops to give guidance to the faithful on the coming General Election is that at 52 pages hardly anybody will bother to read it: and if they do, they are likely to fall asleep!

It is perfectly acceptable for church leaders to engage with politics. Such is not just the permission of the Churchโ€™s teaching, it is its command. But, in the run up to a General Election, the date of which has been known for 5 years, we deserved better than this extraordinarily long, left-leaning tosh.

The letter concludes that it is โ€œabout building a vision of a better kind of world, a better society and better politicsโ€ (as every Miss World would inanely opine when accepting her trophy). That is more a challenge for the Bishops than it is for politicians. As a mirror to what the Church of England has itself achieved after so many years of its privileged public position, then itโ€™s a grim reflection of the failure of that Church when measured by its own terms. As Work and Pensions Secretary, Ian Duncan Smith, whoโ€™s worked miracles to get the jobless back into work, observed wryly to Sky News: โ€œwhen I heard the Bishopsโ€™ comments about alienation and dwindling relevance I thought they were talking about the Church of England congregationsโ€.

Chris Whitehouseโ€™s full analysis of the Bishopsโ€™ letter will be published in The Universe newspaper next week.

Exit mobile version
Facebook X LinkedIn Instagram Who's Top Who's Not