Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Anti-Religious Measures an Assault on Democratic Foundations,

more on the Cardinals lecture
By Hilary WhiteLONDON, April 2, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Tony Blair’s Labour party has been waging an intolerant ideological war against religious belief in the name of tolerance, according to the Catholic archbishop of Westminster, Cormac Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor. Delivering the 30th Thomas Corbishley Memorial lecture at Westminster Cathedral Hall on March 28, the Cardinal, leader of England and Wales’ 4 million Catholics, wondered aloud “whether the threads holding together democracy have begun to unravel.” He denounced the passage of the Sexual Orientation Regulations of the Equality Act that, religious leaders have said, will coerce public compliance with homosexual ideology by faith-based services including schools and adoption agencies.
The Cardinal said that religious freedom is more than the freedom to worship: “It is the freedom to serve the common good according to the convictions of our faith,” he said. “It seems to me we are being asked to accept a different version of our democracy, one in which diversity and equality are held to be at odds with religion.”Describing the passage of the SOR’s as an historic turning point, the Cardinal said, “I am conscious that when an essential core of our democratic freedom risks being undermined, subsequent generations will hold to account those who were able to raise their voices yet stayed silent.”
He added, “What looks like liberality is in reality a radical exclusion of religion from the public sphere.” Since the destruction in the 16th century of Catholic social agencies by King Henry VIII, Britain has periodically discriminated against Catholics and full civil rights were not granted to English Catholics until the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829. While debates were raging earlier this year in the media and Parliament over the imposition of the SOR’s on religious groups, many warned that the claim the Regulations would merely prohibit unjust discrimination were a smoke screen for an all-out assault by secularists on public expressions of religious faith.
In January, the Cardinal sent a letter to MP’s saying that the imposition of homosexual ideology on Catholic charitable services, particularly adoption agencies, may result in the closure of those services. “My fear is that in an attempt to clear the public square of what are seen as unacceptable intrusions, we weaken the pillars on which that public square is erected, and we will discover that the pillars of pluralism may not survive.”
Other legislation mandating changes to the charities law will require churches to prove their services are of “public benefit,” a tactic popular with 19th century French anti-clericals and secularists. The charities are being overseen by one of Britain’s most prominent secularists, Dame Suzi Leather, who has said that the “advancement of religion” may no longer be considered sufficient qualification for charitable tax exempt status. The Cardinal may have been anticipating this next stage in the assault on religious bodies in Britain when he said, “I wonder how far we can still claim as British the assumption that if a religious organisation serves the public interest according to its own rights, it has a legitimate claim on public resources.” “I begin to wonder whether Britain will continue to be a place which protects and welcomes the works of people shaped and inspired by the church,” the Cardinal said.
Read related LifeSiteNews.com coverage:UK: Religious Schools May Not Teach Christian Sexual Morals "As if They Were Objectively True"http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2007/mar/07030504.htmlUK Demonstration Against Sexual Orientation Legislation, and an Angry Response from an MPs Officehttp://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2007/mar/07032709.html

6 comments:

Fr Ray Blake said...

Please do, I'd love to read it.

Anonymous said...

From the Trial of Thomas More:

Seeing that I see ye are determined to condemne me (God knoweth howe) I will nowe in discharge of my conscience speake my minde plainlye and freely touching my Inditment and your Statute withall. Forasmuch as, my Lorde, this Indictment is grounded vppon an acte of parliamente directly repugnant to the lawes of god and his holy churche, the supreeme gouerment of which, or of any parte whereof, may no temporall prince presume by any lawe to take vppon him, as rightfully belonging to the See of Rome, a spirituall preheminence by the mouth of our Sauiour hymself, personally present vppon the earth, only to St Peter and his successors, Byshopps of the same See, by speciall prerogative graunted; It is therefore in lawe amongest Christen men insufficient to charge any Christen man. This Realme, being but one member and smale parte of the Church, might not make a particuler lawe disagreable with the generall lawe of Christes vniuersall Catholike Churche. No more then the city of London, being but one poore member in respect of the whole realme, might make a lawe against an acte of parliament to bind the whole realme. No more might this realme of England refuse obediens to the Sea of Roome then might a child refuse obediens to his owne naturall father.

Duke of Norfolk: We nowe plainely see that ye are malitiously bent.

Anonymous said...

Duke of Norfolk: We nowe plainely see that ye are malitiously bent.

Was it not Thomas Cromwell who said that? Or, at any rate, he did in the film!

Anonymous said...

According to Ackroyd's The Life of Thomas More it was indeed the Duke of Norfolk.

Physiocrat said...

So what can we do about it? It seems to me that the government is driving the country to damnation by any means it can find. But there is no prospective alternative that is any better.

Anonymous said...

What we can do, Henry, is to bear witness as wisely, as boldly and as well to the fact of Christ's Kingship, and to His inescapable power to judge and punish, if sinners will not allow Him to pardon them, as God gives us the grace to do.

If taken to court, then it is upon us to tell the truth as St Thomas More did, that nothing in the nation's public affairs is law if repugnant to the law of God, and that the civil judge who thinks differently will answer to Christ the King at the Last Judgement.

If, even after that, the nation and its judges do not heed the Gospel, then this must be left to the sovereignty of God. If the nation does not listen to the Gospel, there is nothing else that can save it. If it will not hear the truth, then we have no mandate to tell it something else.

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