The Oxford Union is to invite an American pro-family activist to address it after a mix-up on dates.
Scott Lively was due to speak last night in the annual ‘gay rights’ debate, but an error saw him given the date of the Israel debate on 31st January instead. As Mr Lively had already arranged his travel around that date, the President-Elect of the Union has courteously offered to schedule an additional event for him to speak on Friday 1st February.
Proposing the motion were PinkNews.co.uk and Out4Marriage founder Benjamin Cohen, gay rights activist Richard Fairbass of the band Right Said Fred, and Phyll Opoku-Gyimah of Black Pride UK. Opposing the motion was Peter D Williams of Catholic Voices, anti-abortion activist Anthony McCarthy, journalist Lynette Burrows and Rev George Hargreaves, leader of the Christian Party.
Stephen Green, National Director of Christian Voice, has taken part in similar debates at both the Oxford and Cambridge Unions in the past. He said today:
‘Any pretence at an objective, fair-minded debate where minds could be changed by great oratory and consideration of factual evidence has vanished over the years. It has been replaced by emotionalism, fashion and barracking of opponents of the new intolerant status quo.
‘I can only admire the bravery of the young people who go through the ‘No’ lobby at these debates.’
Scott Lively, who has a personal testimony of the healing power of the Lord Jesus and is a strong advocate of Christian healing therapy for those suffering from same-sex attraction, has become a hate-figure of gay rights activists since his address on that subject to parliamentarians in Uganda was followed by the introduction of a Bill to make the promotion of sodomy in the East African nation illegal.
Things are seen differently in Africa from the universities of Britain.
The Prince of Wales if right to raise concerns about the way the Succession to the Crown Bill is being rushed through Parliament without adequate attention being given to the possible ramifications, Christian Voice announced today.
While it may seem like a nice gesture to remove the prohibition on the monarch marrying a Roman Catholic, Prince Charles is right that doing so could set off a chain of unintended consequences that would ultimately destabilize the institution of the monarchy.
But first, what is the Act of Settlement and how did it arise?
Background to the Act of Settlement
James II of England and VII of Scotland
During the reign of James II of England and VII of Scotland (r. 1633 –1701), James managed to alienate himself from his fellow Englishman through his Roman Catholic, pro-French and absolutist policies. When his wife, Queen Mary, produced a Roman Catholic heir in 1688, it was too much for English Protestants to endure. Hoping to divert a Catholic dynasty, seven English nobleman (known later as the ‘Immortal Seven’) invited James’ eldest Protestant daughter, Mary, to come to Britain and rule. She agreed on the condition that she would rule the country jointly with her Dutch husband, William the Prince of Orange.
William came over with an army prepared to fight for the throne against his father-in-law. However, knowing it would be impossible to win a war without popular support, James II retreated to France. This bloodless revolution, known as ‘the Glorious Revolution,’ established the Hanoverian line of British monarchs – a line preserved through the present House of Windsor.
In order to give legal legitimization to Hanoverian rule, Parliament passed the Bill of Rights in December 1689. This was designed to protect Parliament from arbitrary rule of another Sovereign such as the deposed James II, to ensure the continuation of the Protestant faith, and to preserve common law freedoms.
Princess Sophia of Hanover (1630-1714)
Towards the close of the reign of King William III (r. 1650 –1702), it began to look as if the king would die without a legal heir. Since the Bill of Rights had not specified the line of succession far enough into the future to cover such an eventuality, Parliament began to worry that the deposed James II or his offspring might try to capitalize on the situation and claim the throne. In order to simultaneously solve this problem and fix the line of succession ad infinitum, a law known as the Act of Settlement was introduced. It specified that the heirs to the throne would always be descendants of Princess Sophia of Hanover (1630-1714), who was also appointed heir presumptive by the same Act. Sophia was the granddaughter of James I of England.
The Act of Settlement also specified that the monarch must always be Protestant, and it states that if the monarch is ‘reconciled to the See of Rome’ or ‘marries a Papist’ ‘…in all and every such Case or Cases the People of these Realms shall be and are thereby absolved of their allegiance’.
The Act of Settlement, which was extended to Scotland in 1707, also lays down other rules of constitutional import, including male preference primogeniture. The Act of Settlement came to apply to all of the Commonwealth realms in 1931 through the Statute of Westminster. The Statute of Westminster 1931 actively forbids any alteration to the rules of succession without the agreement of all 16 nations that share the throne. That is why current attempts to ‘modernize’ the laws of succession must first be approved by all 16 legislatures, from the little island of Tuvalu with a population of 11,000 to the United Kingdom. If even one nation disagrees, the proposed changes cannot be enacted. (See Zoe Kirk-Robinson’s article ‘Why Kate’s First-born May Not Be Crowned.’)
So each of the nations in the Commonwealth who share the Queen as monarch (the ‘realms’) must ask themselves whether the Act of Settlement is still relevant in the modern world. Is there any reason to think that this relic from the early 18th century should still be preserved?
As each of the Commonwealth realms considers this question, they must take into account the fact that constitutional experts believe that changing the laws could precipitate a constitutional crisis. As soon as the monarch is allowed to marry a Roman Catholic, the possibility exists that the future heir to the throne could be raised Catholic. Indeed, Roman Catholic common law mandates that if even one of the parents is Catholic, the children must be raised catholic. If that were to happen, then there would either have to be an abdication crisis, or the law would need to be changed to allow Roman Catholics to succeed to the throne, reversing Henry VIII’s historic break with Rome. If the latter course prevailed, then it could lead to the bizarre situation of having a Roman Catholic as the supreme head of the Church of England.
In his 2003 Spectator article ‘The Price of Liberty’, Adrian Hilton presented a strong case for preserving the prohibition on the monarch marrying a Roman Catholic:
Since [Roman Catholic] canon law requires that all children of Roman Catholics be brought up in that faith, such a proposed amendment would eventually create an exclusively Catholic royal dynasty, whose primary allegiance would be to the higher spiritual and temporal authority — the Papacy….
The Papacy is, by its own admission, a political institution, and still claims universal legislative authority or jurisdiction. It would be intolerable to have, as the sovereign of a Protestant and free country, one who owes any allegiance to the head of any other state.…
It is not possible to discuss the removal of the bars on Catholics and the monarchy without at the same time discussing the constitutional position of the Church of England; and therein lies the principal division among Catholics. There are many who regard the establishment of the Church of England as a great advantage for the faith because it perpetuates Christianity as the ‘official’ religion through its presence in Parliament. For those who hold this view, a minor historical relic of anti-Catholic discrimination is a lesser evil to be tolerated than the alternative. For when the protective barrier of Anglican establishment is torn away, Christianity would lose a political voice and Britain its cultural governmental foundation as a Christian nation.
The Act therefore demands that the sovereign must ‘join in communion with the Church of England as by law established’. While earlier monarchs have come from Calvinist and Lutheran traditions and have not been prevented by their own Church discipline from receiving the Eucharist, the position of Rome is quite different. These difficulties do not emanate from the Church of England but from the Roman Catholic Church, which prohibits its adherents from receiving Holy Communion at Anglican services. To forbid an Anglican Eucharist to a Roman Catholic monarch who remains Supreme Governor of the Church of England is not only absurd but plainly regressive.
Further, since Rome does not recognise the Church of England as a Christian Church in the full and proper sense of that term, it does not recognise the Holy Orders of Anglican clergy, which Pope Leo XIII condemned as ‘absolutely null and utterly void’. The present Pope has reiterated this view. A Roman Catholic monarch who followed the teaching of the Mother Church would therefore have to regard the archbishops, bishops and clergy of the Church of England (and, incidentally, of the Church of Scotland) as lay people, lacking the ordained authority to preach and celebrate the sacraments. And further still, a Roman Catholic monarch would be unable to be crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury. As long as the coronation service involves a priestly anointing, no ‘utterly void’ Anglican could administer it. Presumably a future Roman Catholic monarch would receive the crown from the Pope, and the wheel would have come full circle.”
More recently Telegraph journalist Charles Moore has tried to raise awareness of these and other potential problems. Writing in the Telegraph in December 2011, Moore drew attention to the chain of unintended consequences that could be set in motion by lifting the prohibition on a monarch marrying a Roman Catholic:
Suppose the heir to the throne does marry a Catholic, which, under the new rules, he/she will be permitted to do. Suppose that they have a child. Suppose the child, as the Catholic Church requires, is brought up a Catholic. Under the law, even as reformed, that child cannot become Monarch. “Are you asking me,” the doubting MP might inquire, “to vote for a reform which could precipitate a constitutional-cum-religious crisis?”
If, on the other hand, the law were changed to permit a Catholic to come to the throne, there would be a lot more questions. What would happen to the monarch’s headship of the Church of England? How would he/she be crowned? “Are you proposing, Prime Minister,” the awkward MP could ask, “to disestablish the Church? If so, please lay before us your legislation for doing so.” Untune that string, as Shakespeare famously put it, and hark what discord follows. There may be a way around these problems, but at the least Government should be inviting a rigorous public debate about these implications, instead of conducting the changes in a semi-secret environment
Implications for Hereditary Titles
Halsbury Laws of England
What about Prince Charles’ other concern, regarding hereditary titles? Here again, the Prince has identified a problem that has received almost no attention in the public discourse.
Changing the succession laws for the crown will almost certainly result in gender equality being extended to the inheritance of peerages. Although succession of hereditary peerages forms no part of any proposed change, it would be hard to preserve the older system of inheritance once male primogeniture had been abandoned with respect to the crown. This is especially true given that the heir to the throne succeeds to a number of peerages. If male primogeniture is changed, then will succession in the dukedoms, earldoms and baronetcies attached to the throne devolve to the eldest child, or will there be a two-tier system whereby the titles to which the throne is attached will still devolve to the eldest male?
Hereditary peerages are created by writ, by Act of Parliament, by charter, or by letters patent. The rules governing the order of succession of future heirs are specified in the original grant for the peerage in question. The preferred method by which peerages are created is by letters patent. With few exceptions, the patents transmit titles only to male offspring, a system known as “tail male.” As Halsbury’s Laws of England states:
“Letters patent creating a peerage must specify the patentee, the name of the dignity and its limitation to future heirs of the patentee. The limitation must be one known to the law. The rule in England is a limitation to heirs male of the body with an occasional addition of special remainders to bring in the daughters and their issue, brothers, nephews and collaterals, but ultimately the descent is always fixed in an heir male line.”
This “limitation to heirs male of the body” for the succession of peerages is even stricter than the rules regulating the succession of the crown (which allows a female to inherit when she is without brothers) and can result in peerages becoming extinct. As Regency Researcher Nancy Mayer has explained,
The descent of most hereditary English peerages is determined by the patent by which the peerage was created. Except in very rare cases, the patents say that the peerage should descend to heirs male of the body of the one for whom it was created. That means that ordinarily the peerage becomes extinct if the first earl, for instance, doesn’t have a son. Once in a while patent will let a brother or a nephew inherit if the man does not have a son. When Admiral Lord Nelson died without a son, his patent allowed his brother to inherit. On the other hand, and much more typical, was what happened to Admiral Lord Collingswood’s peerage. It became extinct on his death because he had only daughters.
In the event that a statute were to change the presumption of male descent with respect to the Crown, it would only be a matter of time before the eldest daughter of a peer will challenge original letters patent on the grounds that these too are unfair and out of step with the rules governing the thrown. Such a challenge would be hard to resist once male primogeniture has been abandoned with respect of the monarchy.
There is good reason to be cautious about equal absolute primogeniture with respect to peerages. It is true that under the current system a peerage may become extinct in the absence of male heirs or it may move to another branch of the family. While this may seem undesirable, the alternative is that this inheritance passes out of the family completely. Indeed, if current letters patent were to be altered by law to remove the distinction between the sexes, the title and its associated property could only then be traced in future through a complicated maze of ancestors, one generation passing perhaps through the mother, the next through the father. Without the tribal system and the periodic restructuring of the ancient Hebrew Jubilee laws, it would be difficult to ensure that property remained in the original family if daughters could succeed to a title.
As this suggests, a change in the order of succession does not just affect the Monarchy, but could have ripple effects in every dukedom, earldom, baronetcy in the land. Prince Charles is right to raise the concerns that he has.
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The Prince of Wales has raised concerns with senior Whitehall officials about the Succession to the Crown Bill, which he believes could let off a chain of “unintended consequences.”
In a private meeting last month with Richard Heaton, permanent secretary at the Cabinet Office, Prince Charles confided his fear that attempts to overturn the ancient laws governing the crown’s succession are being fast-tracked without adequate attention to the possible ramifications.
Details of the meeting were communicated to the Daily Mail last week by “a well-placed source,” who said the Prince was very worried what would happen if his future grandchild were to marry a Roman Catholic.
Currently the 1701 Act of Settlement prohibits the heir to the throne from marrying a Roman Catholic, but this is set to be scrapped in the reforms being introduced by the Coalition Government.
The anxiety voiced by the Prince of Wales echoes concerns raised by constitutional experts, who have pointed out that if the law were changed to allow a future monarch to marry a Roman Catholic, then the possibility exists that the future heir to the throne could be raised Catholic. If that were to happen, then there would either have to be an abdication crisis, or the law would need to be changed to allow Roman Catholics to succeed to the throne, reversing Henry VIII’s historic break with Rome. If the latter course prevailed, then it could lead to the bizarre situation of having a Roman Catholic as the supreme head of the Church of England.
Prince Charles was told that all such issues could be resolved through negotiations with the Vatican, a solution he reportedly found “unsatisfactory and unconvincing.”
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg dismissed the legitimacy of Prince’s concerns by declaring in the Commons: “I can give him complete reassurance that these proposals will not in any way alter the status of the established Church or the status of the monarch as head as head of the church. There is absolutely nothing in these proposals to alter the status of the church.”
The Prince of Wales also raised questions about the lack of detailed consultation over the Bill, which threatens to throw the entire aristocracy into turmoil. The prince said that while he accepts the abolition of male primogeniture in principle, he is very worried what could happen if the changes spilled over into other hereditary titles currently regulated by peerage law.
Meanwhile, the legislative framework for the succession changes are being hammered out in private, under the coordination of New Zealand Secretary of the Cabinet and Clerk of the Executive Council, Rebecca Kitteridge. The details of the process are being kept secret, as is the legal advice the Government is receiving.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg is in charge of getting the changes moved through the UK Parliament and he has seen fit to do so with procedures normally reserved for anti-terror laws. The process has been so fast that the Queen was not informed of the decision to legislate until very soon before the Bill was published, while Prince Charles was not consulted at all.
But are the concerns raised by Prince Charles legitimate? We think they are, and in a future post we will explain why.
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Shirley Chaplin, Gary McFarlane and Lillian Ladele lost their employment tribunal hearings in England and argued that their employers’ actions went against articles 9 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protected their rights to “freedom of thought, conscience and religion” and prohibited religious discrimination.
Shirley Chaplin was moved to a desk job by Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Trust after they changed the uniform code to a v-neck, exposing the necklace bearing a cross she had been wearing. Chaplin’s employers suggested that her cross on a chain might get caught on somebody. There was no evidence it ever had. At the same time, however, the employers allowed two Muslim doctors to wear a close-fitting hijab.
Gary McFarlane is a Christian counsellor who was sacked from his job with Relate in 2008 because he confided that he would not be comfortable counselling homosexual couples about sexual problems. Even after Relate conceded that they were wrong to sack Mr McFarlane without giving him notice, they still didn‘t give him his job back.
Lilian Ladele was a Christian Registrar for the London Borough of Islington, appointed before the Civil Partnership Act 2004 changed the law. Originally she was allowed to swap shifts with colleagues so she would not have to compromise her convictions. However, in March 2006 two homosexual registrars complained about Ladele’s refusal to perform gay unions. The local authority changed its rules in December 2007 and she was dismissed. Even though she initially won her case against Islington Council in July 2008, the Employment Appeal Tribunal ruled against her later that year.
In all three cases, the European Court Judges held that the UK had not violated the applicants’ rights.
In the fourth case, British Airways was held to have violated the rights of Nadia Eweida under Article 9 when it told her to remove or cover up a necklace with a cross.
Ms Eweida, 60, a Coptic Christian from Twickenham in south-west London, told the BBC she was “jumping with joy” after the ruling, adding that it had “not been an easy ride”.
The four made individual applications to the ECHR after losing separate employment tribunals but their cases were heard together.
David Cameron faced charges of hypocrisy after calling for a Christian ‘fightback’ and then instructing ministers to contest the claims. As a result, the UK argued that the rights of the employees were only protected in private.
The ruling severely limits the extent to which Christians who take their beliefs seriously can hold down jobs in the public sector and is a step back for religious freedom in the United Kingdom.
Elizabeth Oldfield, Director of Christian think-tank Theos, said:
‘One does not have to agree with the beliefs of the applicants to support their cases. It should not be beyond the wit of an employer to work with strongly-held religious commitments, rather than dismiss them. However, what we are increasingly seeing is an unwillingness to accommodate them reasonably.’
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Liam Fox MP said the proposed legislation would appease only a ‘a very small, if vocal, minority’ and risked alienating Christians, whom he described as ‘a large stabilising and normally acquiescent section of this country’.
Mr Fox singled out the so-called ‘quadruple lock’ under which the Church of England and the Church in Wales will be specifically prohibited from conducting gay marriages.
The ‘Quadruple Lock’ would:
1 Ensure the legislation states explicitly that no religious organisation, or individual minister, can be compelled to marry same-sex couples or to permit this to happen on their premises;
2 Provide an ‘opt-in’ system for religious organisations who wish to conduct marriages for same-sex couples;
3 Amend the Equality Act 2010 to reflect that no discrimination claims can be brought against religious organisations or individual ministers for refusing to marry a same-sex couple or allowing their premises to be used for this purpose; and
4 Ensure that the legislation will not affect the Canon law of the Churches of England or the Church in Wales who will thereby not be allowed to ‘opt in’ under point 2.
But Mr Fox said: ‘Banning the Church of England from what would be an otherwise legal activity is anomalous and absurd. If the “exemption” is, as stated, because the Church had made clear their objection to same-sex marriage then why not exempt the Catholic church, which has been even clearer in its opposition?
‘The idea of making certain practices illegal for one Christian church, but not others, risks further weakening and splintering Britain’s traditional religion at a time when many Christians feel that they are under threat on a number of secular, political and cultural fronts.’
This legal anomaly, he said, could allow the European court of human rights to ‘drive a coach and horses through the legislation’.
Christian Voice has urged other denominations to press the Government to be included in the ‘Quadruple Lock’, not that we believe it will make any difference to the European Court when it considers the matter, as it undoubtedly will.
In its response to the consultation, the Government said homosexual couples would not need to consummate their ‘marriages’, tacitly acknowledging that they lack the full set of equipment to do so. Nor would a homosexual be able to commit adultery within a ‘gay marriage’, unless it was in the normal way with a person of the opposite sex. No ‘lesser act of sexual gratification’, which covers homosexual practice, can in law amount to adultery.
The Government also propose to amend marriage vows so that homosexual couples are ‘referred to as ‘husband’ and ‘husband’, or ‘wife’ and ‘wife’ for legal purposes.’ Where that leaves ‘butch and femme’ homosexual relationships, where one party adopts a male role and the other a female, has not been addressed.
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‘Irresponsible’: Blake Harrison leads in BBC3’s suicide comedy ‘Way to Go’
An MP has criticised the BBC for planning to air a situation comedy which treats assisted suicide as a “matter of fun”, reports the Sunday Express.
‘Way To Go’ has three young men building a machine that can kill people. They offer their services for money to those who wish to end their lives. The show is written by US-based writer Bob Kushell and stars Blake Harrison, Marc Wootton and Ben Heathcote.
But Conservative MP Mark Pritchard has slammed the sitcom, planned to go out on BBC 3 this month. He said: “This is a sensitive and complex issue that should be handled with compassion and understanding.
“It is a sad fact that assisted dying is now regarded a ‘revenue stream’ to some foreign clinics and clearly as a matter of fun by some parts of the BBC.”
In one scene the lever of the machine is pulled to inject a fatal dose. Harrison’s next-door neighbour dies in a matter of seconds.
Later a friend phones from a pub with another client for the assisted suicide machine.
He tells him: “He’s got stomach cancer. How fantastic is that!”
Mark Pritchard MP: ‘Sensitive and complex issue’
BBC 3 controller Zai Bennett said: ‘Bob Kushell’s scripts are in turn dark, poignant, absurd, moving and brilliant, but mostly they are very, very funny. I’m thrilled that Way To Go is coming to BBC 3.’
Comedy producer Jon Plowman, responsible for shows such as The Office and Little Britain, said: ‘Way To Go is a show about a current and difficult issue but it treats its serious subject in the same way that Arsenic And Old Lace dealt with old lady poisoners or Kind Hearts And Coronets dealt with aristocratic murders.’
Government figures show that three-quarters of suicides in the UK are by men with those aged 30-39 at highest risk of suicide, followed by men aged 40-49.
However, teenage suicide is a serious and growing problem. Suicide is the second most common cause of death in people aged 15-24, behind accidental death.
Concerns have repeatedly been raised about websites promoting suicide and self-harm not least as reported in both the Daily Telegraph and the Independent. The latter reported on new research carried out by the charity ‘Beat Bullying’ which, it said, ‘revealed that websites encouraging suicide and self-harm topped a list of teenagers’ greatest worries about the internet. The findings have raised fears that growing numbers of young people are becoming vulnerable to the messages being put out by such sites.’
Tallulah Wilson committed suicide on the railway in a copy of that of fellow-fifteen-year-old Rosie Whitaker.
The Telegraph reported: ‘Tallulah had also dedicated her Twitter account to Rosie Whitaker, also 15, who apparently threw herself in front of a train at Beckenham Junction station in south-east London in June after becoming “heavily influenced” by suicide websites.’
In Bridgend, a spate of teenage suicides prompted Phillip Walters, the coroner, to investigate social media websites which were heavily implicated in the deaths. The coroner said: ‘I shall be looking at these networking sites myself to see if there is a link between them and the growing number of youngsters committing suicide.’ Bridgend MP Madeleine Moon described the deaths as ‘tragic’.
Stephen Green, National Director of Christian Voice, said today:
‘Amidst a growing cult of suicide among young people, BBC3 thinks it is appropriate to screen a comedy making light of suicide, in which the protagonists are those from exactly the most vulnerable demographic. The comparison with 1940s film comedies is false. There are not legions of old ladies about to be prompted to become serial killers. But there are hundreds if not thousands of vulnerable teenagers.
‘Making suicide funny makes it acceptable. BBC3 is reinforcing the message of the suicide websites. ‘Irresponsible’ hardly conveys the enormity of it. If their programme results in just one suicide of a troubled young person, BBC3 controller Zai Bennett and new Director General Tony Hall will have blood on their hands.’
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An MP is proposing legislation that would prevent Princess Kate from ever becoming Queen.
The move to bring equality to the laws of succession has taken a strange twist as an MP has proposed legislation that would prevent the Duchess of Cambridge from ever becoming Queen.
John Hemming, MP, is attempting to add a clause to the Succession to the Crown Bill that would mean HRH would be called “Princess consort” rather than Queen when Prince William ascends to the throne.
The proposed amendment is based on allegations that the current system is ‘sexist’ since it allows the wife of a King to be called Queen but it does not allow the husband of a queen to be called King. Mr Hemming said: “It’s not right that a Queen Regnant is treated as less important than a King Regnant.”
Later this month Mr Hemming will be officially tabling his proposed amendment. If the House of Commons agrees to add it to the Succession Bill, then the royal family could become the first victims of the equality measures they have tacitly supported.
A spokesman from Clarence House said, “It’s a matter for the Government”, suggesting that the royal couple is prepared to acquiesce with whatever Parliament decides.
Any changes will not affect Camilla because Prince Charles has already said she will be Princess Consort because of the complications of their past divorces.
John Hemming
Meanwhile, the media continues to promote the idea that the rules governing the laws of succession have already been changed to allow first-born daughters to inherit the crown ahead of younger brothers. (See section below for more information on what these changes involve and why we are against them.) The Royal Central website has announced that “Until 2011, men had priority over any women in the line of succession, this was changed after a commonwealth heads of government meeting in 2011, meaning whatever gender the Royal baby is, it will definitely reign as King or Queen.”
The truth is that The Succession of the Crown Billhas only had its first reading, which took place on 13 December 2012. (Watch the progress of the bill on Parliament’s website here.) Beyond that, all that has happened is that the heads of state for the various Commonwealth realms have all individually agreed to ask their respective governments to pass legislation in favour of these changes. Between now and when those laws finish passing through the parliamentary process is the time for critical debate. The British government is trying to short-circuit all debate by telling everyone that the changes have already been made and that the final legislative process is merely “a few parliamentary turns of the wheel.”
PRAY: Ever since it emerged that Government was planning to tamper with the succession changes, Christian Voice has been warning that this is a slippery slope. Even a year ago it would have been unthinkable for the Duchess of Cambridge to face the prospect of never becoming Prince William’s Queen. But once the Pandora’s box of gender equality has been opened, we have entered a fairy tale world in which almost anything could come about. Pray that the Lord will protect the monarchy from those who would seek to use the rhetoric of equality to disband the monarchy completely.
Also pray that the Duchess has conceived a boy so that all the hype the hassle about having to quickly change the succession laws would die down.
WRITE to your MP asking him/her to vote against Hemming’s proposed amendment. Ask for your concerns to be forwarded to the appropriate minister. Also write to Her Majesty the Queen and ask her to voice opposition to these proposals. Her Majesty The Queen, to Buckingham Palace, London SW1A 1AA.
The Order of Succession and the Current Debate
The “order of succession” is the procedure regulated by Parliamentary statute for determining who the new monarch will be at the time the old one dies. The current laws regulating the order of succession follow a system known as ‘male primogeniture’, which is short for “male preference cognatic primogeniture.” Halsbury’s Laws of England explain this system as follows:
“In the absence of statutory limitations, therefore, the Crown would descend lineally to the issue of the reigning monarch, males being preferred to females, and subject to the right of primogeniture amongst both males and females of equal degree, whilst children would represent their deceased ancestors ‘per stirpes in infinitum.’ Upon failure of lineal descendants, the Crown would pass under the rule to the nearest collateral relation descended from the blood royal.”
Put simply, this means that younger sons take precedence over their older sisters in line for the throne. A woman will only inherit the throne of Britain if she has no eligible male siblings. A younger brother – no matter how young – will always take precedent over older sisters in the order of succession. Given the system of male primogeniture, our present queen became monarch only because she did not have any brothers. Similarly, Queen Victoria (1819 –1901) was only able to inherit the throne because she had been the only child of Edward, Duke of Kent and Victoria Maria Louisa of Saxe-Coburg. Under the present system, if Prince William and Catherine’s first-born child happens to be a daughter, she would only become a direct heir to the throne if she is not later followed by the birth of a male brother.
An example of a younger brother inheriting the throne ahead of a younger sister occurred when Queen Victoria’s son Edward VII inherited the throne in 1901 over his older sister Princess Victoria. Had Princess Victoria become the next queen, she would have been Queen Victoria II while her son, Kaiser Wilhelm II, would likely have been king over a huge British-German Empire.
Those who oppose the present system have pointed to the changes introduced in the succession laws of other European monarchies which have transitioned over to the system of absolute primogeniture. For example, Sweden changed over to absolute primogeniture in 1980, the Netherlands in 1983, Norway in 1990, Belgium in 1991, Denmark in 2009 and Luxembourg in 2011.
While the previous Labour Government supported a change from male primogeniture to absolute primogeniture, this had not been considered an issue of any urgency. This is because a change in the law would affect neither Prince Charles (the current heir to the throne), nor Prince William (the second in line for the throne) since neither of them have older sisters. It was not until the lead-up to the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton that the issue was again thrust into the national limelight. Policy makers began to speculate what would happen if the royal couple’s first-born child happened to be a female. Wouldn’t it be unfair if such a child was not able to enjoy an equal right to the throne? Shouldn’t Britain change its laws to reflect “modern” values such as “equality” and “fairness”?
The debate culminated at the Commonwealth of Nations summit in Australia on 28 October 2011 when David Cameron sought agreement from the heads of the Commonwealth realms to change the rules. He had prepared the ground by writing a letter earlier in the month to all the countries urging them to support a change and suggesting that present rules “enshrine male superiority.”
The reason it was necessary for the UK Government to consult with the sixteen Commonwealth realms is because the law prevents the British Parliament from making unilateral changes to the rules of succession without first getting approval of the other nations that share the crown.
Despite the fact that the individual governments have not yet had a chance to vote on the proposed changes, both the media and the British Government have been talking about the matter as if the changes have already been introduced. For example, on 29 October 2011, the Daily Mailran an article with the dramatic title: ‘If Wills and Kate have a girl first, she’ll be queen! Commonwealth agrees historic change to give sex equality in Royal succession.’
It has been a shrewd tactical move on the part of the media and the British Government to keep telling everyone that the succession laws have already been changed. Now that it is approaching the time for a vote, the Government is telling members of Parliament that they must merely ratify what has already been agreed. What should in fact be an occasion of robust debate will be presented as a mere formality. This is a point that Telegraph journalist Charles Moore picked up upon in an article in December 2011, when he drew attention to the ‘widespread delusion’ that the laws had already been changed and predicted the events that are nor transpiring.
“There is a widespread delusion, I find, that the succession to the throne has been changed. If William and Kate have a first-born daughter, people think, that girl will be Queen.… It’s all been sorted out, apparently. There will be what is called – without any apparent sense of absurdity – a Royal Equality Act, and then Bob’s your uncle (though your poor uncle Bob, if currently in line to the throne, will now have to give place to your first-born aunt).
It is not surprising that people think this, because that is what they have been told to think.
It is being put together semi-secretly, and our Government will not disclose the legal advice it is receiving. It is also, in spirit, imperialist: the British Government decides, and then tries to push all the ‘lesser’ countries into agreeing.
When the reforms do eventually reach the 16 parliaments, the government line will be that this has all been agreed and so legislators should just nod it through. The Queen may be embarrassed, but since, constitutionally, she can act only on the advice of her ministers, she will be powerless. At this point, any self-respecting Member of Parliament would be entitled to say: ‘Wait a minute! You are trying to change the rules by which our head of state is chosen and controlled. Is this good for her and her heirs? Is it good for our country? I am going to ask some difficult questions.’”
So why are we against changing the laws of succession? There are a number of reasons, but the main reason is that we find all the arguments for changing the law woefully lacking. Though the rhetoric against male primogeniture takes a variety of forms, it usually always reduces to one of four arguments. Although each of these four arguments has a prima facie appeal, as we unpack each one it will become apparent that they are based either on factual misunderstanding or faulty reasoning. Even more crucially, three out of these four arguments threaten to undermine the very existence of the monarchy itself.
Faulty Argument # 1: The current succession laws are out of keeping with modern society
Advocates of absolute primogeniture typically avoid appealing to any objective ethical criteria but instead argue on the grounds that the current system is “old fashioned” or “out of keeping with modern society.” For example, deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has commented:
“Prince William and Catherine Middleton might have a baby daughter for instance as their first child, I think most people in this day and age would think it’s worth considering whether we change the rules so that that baby girl then could become the future monarch.
“I think that would be in keeping with the changes that happen in society as a whole. My own personal view is that in this day and age the idea that only a man should ascend to the throne I think would strike most people as a little old-fashioned. I think it is worth thinking about, I think it is worth talking about. It is worth looking at what other countries that would be affected also feel on the subject.”
Notice that Clegg’s personal view is based, not on reasoned argument, but on an appeal to being up to date and modern. He appeals twice to “this day and age” and suggests that the current system may be “a little old-fashioned.” Mr Clegg is not alone. Keith Vaz, MP, echoed the opinion of many when he referred to the laws as “out-dated”and stated in Parliament that
“Whereas [male-preference primogeniture] might have been acceptable in another age, I believe that at this time in our history Britain is a modern…society and that this ought to be reflected in our succession rules…. We have a 21st century monarch and we need 21st century succession rules to match.”
Finally, when David Cameron announced the changes at the Commonwealth of Nations conference, he also appealed to the need to be modern as if this alone furnished the only justification required for changing the laws:
“Attitudes have changed fundamentally over the centuries and some outdated rules, like some of the rules on succession, just don’t make sense to us anymore.”
“The idea that a younger son should become monarch instead of an elder daughter simply because he is a man… – this way of thinking is at odds with the modern countries that we have become.”
In reality, it is completely false that male primogeniture is out of keeping with the twenty-first century, since the royal houses in Spain, Monaco, Thailand, Portugal and Swaziland all follow the same system of male primogeniture as Britain. But even if this were not the case, the appeal to modernity is plagued with a host of problems. Chief among these problems is that it presupposes a chronological criterion of truth by which ideas and policies are being evaluated, not by the standard of right or wrong, truth or falsehood, but according to whether they are antiquated or modern. Such an approach can often be effective in creating prejudice against an idea through false assumptions, thus siphoning the debate away from more objective criteria. Herbert Schlossberg described the psychology that occurs in this process of creating prejudice through hidden assumptions:
“No serious thought can be constructed without assumptions, but recognizing them – in our own thinking as well as in others is vital if we are to avoid falling into serious error. Assumptions are beliefs; if they were proven they would not be assumptions. And they are beliefs so taken for granted that it is not deemed necessary to prove them. That makes them doubly seductive: first, because the careless or untrained are misled into accepting conclusions without recognizing their shaky foundation of unstated beliefs; and second, the very fact that the most dubious beliefs are so taken for granted by experts lends an aura of verisimilitude that beguiles the overly respectful into accepting them without question.” Herbert Schlossberg, Idols for Destruction: The Conflict of Christian Faith and American Culture (Crossway, 1993), 8.
The chronological criterion of truth is just such a hidden assumption. C.S. Lewis called this type of reasoning “chronological snobbery” and described it as “the uncritical acceptance of the intellectual climate common to our own age and the assumption that whatever has gone out of date is on that account discredited.” Lewis went on to point out that
You must find why it went out of date. Was it ever refuted (and if so by whom, where, and how
conclusively) or did it merely die away as fashions do? If the latter, this tells us nothing about its truth or falsehood. From seeing this, one passes to the realization that our own age is also “a period,” and certainly has, like all periods, its own characteristic illusions. They are likeliest to lurk in those widespread assumptions which are so ingrained in the age that no one dares to attack or feels it necessary to defend them. [C.S. Lewis, Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1995), 201.]
C.S. Lewis
If Lewis’s words are applied to the question of our succession laws, it follows that it is insufficient for our leaders to merely assert that some of the rules on succession are old fashion and just don’t make sense in our modern world. We must find out why these rules no longer make sense, and whether the reason for them no longer making sense is rational or not.
More seriously, the hidden set of assumptions which animate Faulty Argument #1 could threaten the very existence of the monarchy itself. Those who have sought to spread the poison of republicanism throughout the Commonwealth have often done so with similar appeals to “this day and age”, suggesting that the monarchy itself is out of date and a relic from the past. If the chronological criterion of truth is allowed to flourish when it comes to changing the order of succession, it may be only a matter of time before the same principle begins buttressing those who wish to challenge the very institution of the monarchy.
Few people have bothered to ask why the appeal to “modernity” settles the issue and removes the need for critical reflection. One of the only people, outside those of us at Christian Voice, who has been asking these difficult questions is journalist Charles Moore. In an article for the Telegraph on 7 December, Moore wrote:
When I spoke to ministers this week to ask why it was good to change the succession to the British throne, I was told that it was “modern”, as if that settled the argument.
Most people will probably be too polite to contest the Government’s proposal that the firstborn child of the monarch, or of his/her heirs, will henceforth succeed to the throne regardless of sex. But what is “modern” about a system which prefers the firstborn over any other child? Why is that not being changed? When I asked this question, no one could give me an answer. What is “modern”, indeed, about the idea that the British head of state should be appointed because of blood at all? In what sense is the principle of monarchy modern? Did the Queen get where she is today, the most popular and respected person in the country, by being modern?
Similarly, it is “modern”, say ministers, that the proposed Bill will abolish the rule that no one in line to the throne may marry a Roman Catholic. Yet it would not be modern, apparently, to get rid of the law which says that the Sovereign must be in communion with the Church of England. That law will stay. According to “modern” logic, why?
When they made their bids for leadership, Tony Blair and David Cameron put a great deal of weight on the m-word. It separated them in people’s minds from the long-standing defects of their own parties, and gave them a non-ideological excuse for cleaning the slate….
Faulty Argument # 2: Most people want the succession laws to be changed
In addition to suggesting that male primogeniture is “old-fashioned,” Mr Clegg has also appealed to what “most people” supposedly want. This was implicit in his comment that the current system may strike “most people as a little old-fashioned.” Others have argued against male primogeniture on similar grounds, as if the legitimacy of the practice is automatically thrown into question as soon as a majority are against it. For example, when Mr Vaz was arguing for a change of law in Parliament, he commented, “The reality is that the public want more women to take high office”and pointed out that the majority of citizens allegedly support absolute primogeniture.
Creating policy by majority opinion is a dangerous way to conduct the business of Government. If this impulse were followed to its logical extension, the UK would ultimately collapse into the type of direct democracy attempted by the ancient Athenians.
Once majority opinion is taken to be even implicitly authoritative, then does the legitimacy of the monarchy itself become dependent on 51% of the vote? This was the view reflected by journalist Peregrine Worsthorne when he said, “If a majority of the nation wanted to put an end to monarchy, then, of course, it ought to go.”
Reports indicate that in some Commonwealth countries a majority of the population may already be sceptical of the monarchy. If this is the case, then giving in to the populist impulse with regard to primogeniture may set off a chain reaction that could have unintended consequences. As Daniel Martin has observed, “there are fears that the change [in succession laws] could fuel the republican movement in Australia, where campaigners could use the opportunity to amend legislation to oust the Queen.”In Jamaica the situation is even more unpredictable. Even Britain itself has a virulent anti-monarchy lobby that will use any opportunity – including a public discussion of the succession laws – to challenge the legitimacy of the crown.
Faulty Argument #3: The Current Succession laws are ‘sexist’ and discriminate against women.
Perhaps the most common argument for changing the succession laws is that of equality. Stated crudely, it just isn’t fair that males should take precedent over females in the succession to the throne. In a society committed to equal rights, isn’t it hypocritical for the law to give males a greater chance of inheriting the throne than females? Surely it would be more fair for both sexes to have an equal chance at the crown. Keith Vaz MP gave voice to these sentiments in January 2011:
“At the centre of this debate is a great principle: gender equality…. Our country leads the way in equality issues, and that should be reflected in our succession rules…. Sex discrimination has been illegal in the United Kingdom since 1975. Some 35 years after the passage of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, Britain’s employers must ensure equality between the sexes. Those who break the law are rightly punished. The Bill attempts to bring such gender equality into our succession rules.”
Mr. Vaz words were echoed in David Cameron’s letter to the Commonwealth countries, in which he wrote that “We espouse gender equality in all other aspects of life and it is an anomaly that in the rules relating to the highest public office we continue to enshrine male superiority.”
It is hard not to have some sympathy for this line of reasoning, which is certainly more compelling than Faulty Arguments #1 and #2. Analysts have identified the sense of fairness as being one of the core ethical values embedded within the human intuition. Women especially may feel that the current succession rules are a case of institutionalized discrimination against their sex.
Before exploring the problems with the equality argument, we should note that those who make this objection often over-exaggerate the extent to which the current system excludes women from the throne. Telegraph writer Gerald Warner rightly pointed out in 2009 that
…the present succession rules do not originate in the Act of Settlement, but in our ancient history and tradition. Nor do they effectively discriminate against women. In the period since the Act was passed, we have been ruled by men for 174 years and by women for 134 years.
But while male-preference primogeniture does not prevent a woman from ruling, it always ensures that it will be statistically more probable that a man will inherit the throne. So the question arises: is this a form of institutionalized inequality and gender discrimination? The short answer is yes. However, if we consider the nature of equality we soon find that it is far from obvious that gender discrimination is always a bad thing.
In his book The Retreat of Reason: Political Correctness and the Corruption of Public Debate in Modern Britain, Anthony Browne showed that gender discrimination is not only accepted in many instances, but many times is necessary, laudable and defensible. Browne wrote:
“Young men pay higher rates for car insurance than young women and older men, because young men are, on average, more dangerous drivers than young women and older men. A young man who is a safe driver is thus discriminated against because of the characteristics of other people in his age and sex group….Anti-discrimination campaigners may publicly declare that all discrimination on the grounds of sex should be outlawed, but they are unlikely to agree that all men should have the right to use women’s toilets, that men should be allowed to go to women’s gyms, or to demand overturning the right of women’s clothes shops to refuse to employ men….Men pay smaller pension contributions than women for a given level of private pension, for the simple reason that, on average, they have shorter lives and so on average claim less….The various forms of rational discrimination that are widely accepted are not often called discrimination – although that is clearly what they are – because accepting that some discrimination is actually essential to the working of a society would undermine the public acceptance of a ‘zero tolerance of all forms of discrimination’. The war on discrimination would become meaningless if there were general public awareness that actually some forms of discrimination are needed.”
Given that many forms of gender discrimination are publically practiced and acceptable in modern Britain, we are in a position to identify the basic flaw in the equality argument against male-preference primogeniture. This will be easier to do if we reduce the argument to a simple syllogism:
All gender discrimination is wrong.
Male primogeniture is a case of gender discrimination.
Therefore, male primogeniture is wrong.
The argument follows a classic form and is structurally valid. That is, the conclusion necessarily follows from the first two premises. However, in order for an argument to be sound, it must not only be logically valid, but the premises must also be factually accurate. In the case of the above syllogism, premise 1 is actually false. While some forms of gender discrimination are wrong, Mr Browne is correct when he notes that many forms of gender discrimination are also necessary and justifiable. In fact, our public policy assumes that there are many legitimate forms of discrimination. Thus, David Cameron’s statement that “We espouse gender equality in all other aspects of life” is simply not true.
Gender discrimination simply means treating a person differently than you would if that person were a different sex. For example, when a man dates a woman he is, in a sense, ‘discriminating’ since he would not offer the same treatment to members of his own gender category, assuming he is a heterosexual. In short, there are many cases where men and women are unequal, and these are diversities to be celebrated rather than inequalities to be lamented. (For more about the differences between men and women see Salvo Magazine’s articles ‘Unmaking a Difference‘ and ‘Gender Benders‘.) The real question, therefore, is not whether something is a case of sex discrimination, but whether it is a case of justifiable sex discrimination.
It follows that what we need to be asking is more specific than simply, “Is discrimination wrong?” We need to be asking specifically whether or not sex discrimination with respect to male primogeniture is rationally justified or not. We cannot know that male primogeniture is wrong merely from the fact that it discriminates against women.
We would argue further that the burden rests on those who wish to overturn centuries of precedent to first establish that male primogeniture is a case of unjustifiable discrimination. However, instead of making this case, opponents of male primogeniture tend to simply assume that the discrimination in the succession laws is equivalent to illegal and unjust discrimination. For example, Keith Vaz MP told Parliament: “Sex discrimination has been illegal in the U.K. since 1975 and those who break the law are rightly punished. This rule attempts to bring gender equality into our succession rules.” This is manifestly untrue: only certain types of sex discrimination, namely those deemed to be wrong, have been illegal. In order to show that the discrimination inherent in the succession laws must join the category of illegal discrimination, it is necessary to first establish that such discrimination is wrong. But that is something that none of the critics of male primogeniture have yet been able to do.
Few realize that if the false principles on which the anti-discrimination argument is based were extended to their logical conclusion, it would throw into question the very legitimacy of the monarchy itself. If, under the mantra of ‘equal rights’, we altered the succession rules so as not to discriminate against firstborn females, then it would be hard to know how to answer those who said that such a system is unjust for discriminating against second-born children, or even children from another family. An hereditary monarchy occupied by only one person is inherently antithetical to the idea of ‘equal rights.’ This is one of the reasons that Telegraph commentator Charles Moore was correct to point out that “If you cast doubt on the succession, you cast doubt on the whole thing.”
The power of this logic has not been lost on the virulent anti-monarchy lobby that is at work to destroy the crown. In researching for this paper I wrote to the anti-monarchy group Republic and asked if they saw the debate about succession as an opportunity to make the case for abandoning the monarchy completely. A representative from the group wrote back and said, revealingly, that
“once we concede the principle that the throne should be open to women, the debate will raise a lot more questions: why not a second born daughter? Why not someone else’s daughter? So, we are looking forward to this debate to enable us to highlight the unfairness of the hereditary principle in and of itself.”
These words were echoed by Graham Smith, campaign manager for Republic, when asked about the proposed changes in October 2011. “In practice,” he said, “it simply means that the eldest child of one family is preferred over all others. Inequality is therefore further entrenched in the system.”
Often Faulty Argument #3 is combined with Faulty Argument #1, when it is urged that Britain’s present system is a sexist hangover from its archaic past in which unjust discrimination against women was allegedly institutionalized. For example, Julia Gillard, prime minister of Australia, combined Faulty Argument #1 with Faulty Argument #3 when she noted, “To our modern minds these seem like simple and very rational changes, that there would no longer be a discrimination against women in the way in which the line of succession works…” The problem with combining Faulty Argument #1 and 3 together is the same problem that exists if you put one leaky bucket inside another leaky bucket: you still have a bucket that doesn’t hold any water.
Faulty Argument #4: Britain has had very good Queens in the past and will therefore benefit from a change in the succession laws.
While it is true that Britain has had some very good Queens in the past, this does not in itself prove that the succession laws should be changed to allow for more female monarchs. If it did, then we might equally argue that the succession laws should be changed to allow for even more kings since Britain has had some excellent male monarchs in the past. But that is absurd. It is also worth noting that one of the worst times in British history occurred under the reign of a Queen, namely Mary Tudor, or Bloody Mary (1496–1533).
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Plans to introduce same-sex ‘marriage’ will erode civil liberties and invite unprecedented government meddling in public life.
The Coalition for Marriage has warned of the following threats to civil liberty that are likely to arise in the wake of introducing same-sex ‘marriage.’
Teachers in state schools will be forced to endorse the new definition of marriage. Those that refuse could be disciplined or even dismissed. Such action would be legal.
Parents will ultimately have no legal right to withdraw their children from lessons which endorse the new definition of marriage across the curriculum.
NHS/University/Armed forces chaplains could be lawfully fired by their employers if they express, even outside work time, the belief that marriage is between one man and one woman.
Foster carers could be legally rejected by local authorities on the basis that they fail to embrace the new definition of marriage.
Public sector workers could be demoted or dismissed for expressing support for marriage between one man and one woman.
Registrars who have a conscientious objection to the new definition of marriage will be dismissed unless they are prepared to act against their beliefs.
Churches/mosques/synagogues could ultimately be forced to perform same-sex weddings if a Government ban on such weddings in religious premises is overturned by the European courts.
The Church of England may have to disestablish or face the prospect of court action because, as the established church, it must provide a wedding to any person who is legally eligible to get married.
Faith-based charities could be banned from hiring public facilities if they refuse to endorse the new definition of marriage.
Clergy who disagree with same-sex marriage, but who are in a denomination which has no such objection, could be taken to court if the Government allows religious same sex weddings.
WRITE: to your MP and ask for your concerns to be forwarded to the appropriate minister. This is one issue where Government is allowing MPs to have a free vote, so writing to them has the potential to make a huge difference.
David Cameron could be facing a rebellion from within his own party over plans to legalize gay ‘marriage.’
Parliamentary opposition to same-sex ‘marriage’ is mounting in response to Government’s plans to fast-track a vote on same-sex ‘marriage’ in early 2013.
The actual number of Tory MPs opposed to the change may be as high as 130, while only 60% of Labour voters and 77% of Liberal Democrats say they favour the changes.
The rebellion currently brewing in the Conservative Party is of sufficient magnitude that some insiders believe it may destroy the party, and certainly cost the Tory party the next election.
Among David Cameron’s most vocal critics is Monmouth MP David Davies, who warned, “We’re going to lose a large number of very loyal activists who’ve gone out and campaigned for us over the years and who don’t like this idea, so politically it’s barking mad.”
The Parliamentary backlash has culminated in a letter to the Government that was printed in the Telegraph on 17 December, in which 58 MPs from all parties declared their support of “freedom from the state being able to redefine the meaning of marriage.” They wrote,
SIR – As parliamentarians from different political parties and none, we are united in supporting the institution of marriage defined in law as a union between a man and a woman. We recognise the value of a loving and committed relationship and we respect civil partnership, but affirm the distinctive value of marriage reflecting the complementarity of a man and woman often evidenced in parenthood.
At the last election, none of the three main parties stood on a platform to redefine marriage. It was not contained in any of their manifestos, nor did it feature in the Coalition’s Programme for Government. These facts alone should have led to extreme caution on the part of those calling for this change to be made.
Instead the Government is ignoring the overwhelming public response against the plans. The consultation has ignored the views of 500,000 British residents in favour of anonymous submissions from anyone anywhere in the world. We believe that the Government does not have a mandate to redefine marriage.
We recognise these are issues of conscience which will be given free votes in Parliament. We will be seeking legal guarantees of the same freedom of conscience for our constituents and religious organisations to teach, preach and express a traditional view of marriage.
We are sceptical that the proposed protections will prevent the erosion of liberties of religion and conscience. The proposed redefinition of marriage is unnecessary, given the legal rights established through civil partnerships. We understand some parliamentarians support freedom for same sex couples to marry, but we support a freedom from the state being able to redefine the meaning of marriage.
In addition to the dissent in his own party, David Cameron has received fierce opposition from church spokesmen. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Shrewsbury said in a Christmas sermon that plans to legalize gay ‘marriage’ were comparable to the way the Nazis and Communists tried to undermine religion. The Right Reverend Mark Davies accused David Cameron of trying to redefine the institution of marriage for ‘generations to come.’ He pointed out that both Hitler and Stalin challenged Christianity under the banner of ‘progress’.
The Bishop’s words were echoed by John Smeaton, head of the UK’s leading pro-life and pro-family group, the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, who commented: “The government’s proposals will only be defeated through the dogged, united efforts of politicians, church leaders, pro-family and pro-life activists, who are prepared to defend, with maximum determination, the birthright of every citizen – the existence of the institution of marriage, the permanent, exclusive union of one man and one woman, the basis of the family and the fundamental group unit of society.”
PRAY: that God would grow the strength of the opposition within the Tory party so that these abominable measures will be defeated.
WRITE: if your MP was among those who signed the letter to the Telegraph, write to congratulate and encourage them. Following are the list of MP’s who participated in the letter.
David Burrowes MP (Conservative)
Joe Benton MP (Labour)
David Davis MP (Conservative)
Mary Glindon MP (Labour)
Lord Hylton (Crossbench)
Nigel Dodds MP (Democratic Unionist Party)
Lord Anderson of Swansea (Labour)
Fiona Bruce MP (Conservative)
Jim Dobbin MP (Labour)
Lord Carey of Clifton (Crossbench)
Rehman Chishti MP (Conservative)
Lord Griffiths of Fforestfach (Conservative)
Sir Gerald Howarth MP (Conservative)
Tim Loughton MP (Conservative)
Peter Bone MP (Conservative)
Jeffrey Donaldson (Democratic Unionist Party)
Andrew Selous MP (Conservative)
John Glen MP (Conservative)
Sir Jim Paice MP (Conservative)
Stewart Jackson MP (Conservative)
Lord Edmiston (Conservative)
Jim Shannon MP (Democratic Unionist Party)
Lord Palmer (Crossbench)
Andrew Bingham MP (Conservative)
Lord Shrewsbury and Waterford (Conservative)
Julian Brazier MP (Conservative)
David Simpson MP (Democratic Unionist Party)
Pauline Latham MP (Conservative)
Nick de Bois MP (Conservative)
Richard Drax MP (Conservative)
Lord Tombs (Crossbench)
Jonathan Evans MP (Conservative)
Sir Roger Gale MP (Conservative)
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party)
Gordon Henderson MP (Conservative)
Philip Hollobone MP (Conservative)
Lord Stoddart of Swindon (Independent Labour)
Marcus Jones MP (Conservative)
Lord Swinfen (Conservative)
Baroness Fookes (Conservative)
Jeremy LeFroy MP (Conservative)
Lord Vinson (Conservative)
Karl McCartney MP (Conservative)
Dr William McCrea MP (Democratic Unionist Party)
Anne McIntosh MP (Conservative)
Stephen Metcalfe MP (Conservative)
Anne-Marie Morris MP (Conservative)
David Nuttall MP (Conservative)
Matthew Offord MP (Conservative)
David Davies MP (Conservative)
Mark Pawsey MP (Conservative)
David Ruffley MP (Conservative)
Lord Marlesford (Conservative)
Henry Smith MP (Conservative)
Baroness O’Cathain (Conservative)
Bob Stewart MP (Conservative)
Ben Wallace MP (Conservative)
Craig Whittaker MP (Conservative)
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Reg Travis was cleared of rape and is now campaigning for equality before the law for rape defendants with accusers.
The not guilty verdict in the rape case brought against the late singer Amy Winehouse’s ex-boyfriend illustrates the potential for false accusations in rape cases.
It isn’t the first time that CCTV has come to the aid of a man facing a false rape charge,
In a case which did not make it to court, a female complainant alleged that, while on a night out with friends in a local nightclub, she was grabbed by an unknown male, dragged into nearby toilets and raped.
CID went to the nightclub and checked the CCTV. The police said afterwards: ‘CCTV shows her and this man climb over this rope together, go upstairs, and disappear off into one of the toilets. About twenty minutes later, they come out. You can see her straightening her clothing—I think she gives him a peck on the cheek—and then they exchange telephone numbers before going away.’
What makes matters worse is that accusers of rape are protected with anonymity by the law, but defendants are not.
Reg Traviss is now making the very fair point that the criminal justice system, by siding with his accuser in granting her but not him anonymity, has forgotten the basic biblical principle, that all are equal before the law.
It does not seem fair but it would be an even bigger travesty of justice if those accused of rape were allowed to remain anonymous because it would suggest that rape victims were generally not to be trusted.
While there will always be women who “cry” rape, most of those who do pluck up the courage to go to the police are genuine victims and should be treated as such.
Such is the social stigma around rape that women not only feel too embarrassed or ashamed to report the crime, they are also frightened that they will not be believed.
That situation would get worse if those accused of rape were afforded the special privilege of remaining anonymous.
… the police … do women no favours whatsoever by attracting publicity for the very rare cases when rape victims are making it up.
Is Camilla Tominey right? Are these ‘very rare cases’? Are most complainants ‘genuine victims’? Not according to the figures. Only about 10% of rape complaints make it to court, and of those, just over half, 58%, result in a conviction. Since the law was changed in 1994 to allow cases to be brought with no corroborating evidence, rape cases are often now ‘his word against hers’. The more plausible of the two is likely to be believed, wherever the truth lies, resulting in miscarriage of justice.
Daniel Abeyomi, 19, told the court that he noticed the woman arguing with a man then crying alone, while he was walking home along Heavitree Road. He said she walked with him, they chatted and she kissed him, asked to go back to his home, which he refused, then she initiated sex.
Defence counsel Ian Strongman, summing up his case, said the woman was not making “malicious allegations” but she had “gaps in her memory” from that night, and her friends had then wrongly assumed that she had been raped and had “persuaded her” that this was the case.
In some cases, evidence, often from CCTV, shows the alleged victim was making it all up.
Hilliard, 20, dragged Grant into a Basildon railway station toilet for sex, but later told police that he had forced himself on her. Just a week after the alleged attack, she applied for criminal injuries compensation, which could have netted her £7,500.
Her plan came unstuck when CCTV footage and mobile phone records proved Grant’s innocence. But her twisted story drove Grant to the brink of suicide after he was hounded out of his home and spat at in the street.
What his sister called ‘six months of hell’ started when a woman alleged that he had raped her in a park in 2011.
The court heard that the woman, who said she had drunk more than eight pints of lager and drank spirits during the evening, gave different accounts to police of what had happened. She also texted a friend to tell her she was pregnant, before telling her she had been raped.
CCTV images showed the pair leaving a pub in Holton Road together.
‘False complaints may arise for a variety of reasons. Examples commonly mentioned by respondents during research interviews included: a complainant’s attempts to conceal or deny discovered infidelity; minors concealing consensual under-age sexual activity; consensual sexual activity that is subsequently regretted; and historic complaints following the breakdown of a relationship.’
Rape is a serious crime; a capital crime in the eyes of God. It is a devastating thing to happen, and equally devastating to be accused of wrongly. In far too many cases, too much drink impairs the capacity to make a rational decision, and regrets in the morning turn to a rape accusation.
On other occasions, false accusations can be made to deny a father access to his children in divorce cases, or just to be spiteful after a marriage has come to an end, or perhaps when the husband remarries.
To contradict Camilla Tominey, a ‘special privilege’ – that of remaining anonymous – is already given to rape accusers. In fact, on her own Sunday Express page, she contradicts herself. Having said that women ‘very rarely’ make rape accusations up, she describes 80% of women as liars in a footnote:
‘More than half of British women admit to flirting with men to get their own way, with a fifth saying they do so at work. Just 20%? What a load of fibbers! It might not be what feminists want to hear but a woman who does not use her wiles to get what she wants does not have a pulse.’
That is not to say those acquitted of rape have always behaved impeccably. Our society has slid into a swamp of sexual license where promiscuity abounds and sexual intercourse has become, less the holy expression of love in marriage, more a recreational activity. If we respected biblical morality, young women would be chaste and modest and young men chivalrous and protective. But those whose cases are cited above were innocent of the crime they were accused of.
And just as there are rapists walking free who would be behind bars if it were not for their eloquence in a court-room, there are innocent men in prison just because an untruthful woman was more plausible on the day.
That cannot be right.
Amos 5:24 But let judgment run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.
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Government has proposed a ‘quadruple lock’ to protect churches from equality activists who might use the new ‘gay marriage’ laws to force churches to perform same-sex wedding services.
The quadruple lock moves beyond Government’s original position of restricting same-sex ‘marriages’ to civil services and allows churches a voluntary opt-in should they wish to host gay weddings.
In tacit acknowledgement that their religious liberty provisions will be insufficient, Government has taken special care to protect the Church of England by denying them the opt-in available to other denominations.
Culture Secretary, Maria Miller
Culture Secretary Maria Miller explained on her blog that, “we have to provide a specific legal protection for the Church of England, to ensure that its ‘duty to marry’ applies only to opposite-sex couples. If we didn’t do this the Church could have been vulnerable to legal challenge, something I have been clear I will not accept.”
If this proves anything, it is that the Quadruple Lock is worthless. If the Church of England needs all this extra protection, why are other churches (Baptists, Assemblies of God, Roman Catholic, Elim Baptists, Presbyterians, Eastern Orthodox, Methodists, etc.) excluded from it? As Telegraph journalist Charles Moore has pointed out,
“It is obvious, too, that the safeguards for churches, hastily and without consultation offered by the Government, will be breached. Indeed, religious freedom is breached by the Government’s weird proposal to ban the Church of England from implementing the new law Mr Cameron has just thought up. The fact that Mrs Miller has proposed a ‘quadruple lock’ for the churches is an acknowledgement of how difficult it all is – why else would you need four keys instead of one?”
The Government’s decision to make the Church of England exempt from its proposals was an attempt to divert a potential church-state crisis since Anglican Canon Law states that marriage is “…a union permanent and lifelong for better for worse, till death.” (Canon B30) The Coalition Government has made clear that if any of its plans should conflict with Canon Law, then Parliament is prepared to strong-arm the church. As Government stated in the consultation response: “We do not dispute the Church’s authority here; however it is equally true that Parliament is sovereign and can enact to take account of potential conflicts with the Canon law.”
The four points of the ‘Quadruple Lock’ are:
1 Ensuring the legislation states explicitly that no religious organisation, or individual minister, can be compelled to marry same-sex couples or to permit this to happen on their premises;
2 Providing an ‘opt-in’ system for religious organisations who wish to conduct marriages for same-sex couples;
3 Amending the Equality Act 2010 to reflect that no discrimination claims can be brought against religious organisations or individual ministers for refusing to marry a same-sex couple or allowing their premises to be used for this purpose; and
4 Ensuring that the legislation will not affect the Canon law of the Churches of England or the Church in Wales who will thereby not be allowed to ‘opt in’ under point 2.
Even if the fourth point of the Quadruple Lock were extended to other denominations (which we are campaigning for), it is almost certain that this will be insufficient to withstand a challenge from the European Court of Human Rights, who are able to rule against domestic law. In the case Gas and Dubois v. France, European judges already stated that if a government chooses to extend the definition of marriage to same-sex couples, then it would be a violation of human rights for homosexual couples seeking ‘marriage’ to be denied rights and privileges offered heterosexual couples.
The European Court is simply not going to sit by and allow one of their countries to sustain a two-tier system in which same-sex couples are denied access to a service (i.e., religious weddings in the Church of England) available to heterosexual couples.
WRITE: to your MP and insist that the fourth point of the quadruple lock will be extended to all the other churches in England and Wales. Ask why the Church of England is being given special protections not available to other denominations. Is this because Government anticipates that the first three measures of its “quadruple lock” will not be strong enough to withstand a challenge from equality activists, and because of this it wishes to have extra safe-guards in place for the Church of England?
Also point out that the European Court of Human Rights is almost certainly going to find the proposed two-tier system in breach of equality legislation. Point out that Government’s response to the consultation shows that they have not understood the import of Gas and Dubois v. France.
Ask for your concerns to be forwarded to the appropriate minister.
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Christian Voice National Director Stephen Green spoke at a meeting of the Challenging Orthodoxies Society in Manchester last night, alongside Guy Otten of the Manchester Humanist Society and Shahid Saleem.
The meeting, chaired by Catriona Watson, was called ‘Christmas Unwrapped – are national celebrations of Christian festivals still appropriate in a multicultural society’? By a happy coincidence, it took place on the very day the Office for National Statistics released the 2011 census figures on religion.
The blurb for the event said:
‘Our University Calendar is dictated by Christian religious festivals, as are the calendars of the majority of institutions, businesses and individuals in the UK. Semester two doesn’t finish until the end of January yet we have a four week break just a couple of weeks before, schools take two weeks off at the end of December when everybody could have an extra two weeks in the sun in July.
‘What about those who don’t celebrate Christmas but still have to take time of work for a festival they don’t believe in? Christmas decorations are paid for by councils and institutions but what do those who celebrate Eid or Hannukah get for their taxes?
‘Challenging Orthodoxies Society is exploring whether nationwide Christmas celebrations are still appropriate in a multicultural nation. Would a move towards treating all religious holidays equally be the forward thinking actions of a secular state or is questioning such a well-established cultural tradition simply a symptom of ‘christianophobia’ and too much focus on being politically correct.’
To a meeting sadly depleted because the Politics Philosophy and Economics Society decided to hold their annual Christmas party on the same night, Stephen Green said:
According to the census figures just published today, there was a decrease in people who identify as Christian (from 71.7 per cent to 59.3 per cent) and an increase in those reporting no religion (from 14.8 per cent to 25.1 per cent) in England and Wales, between 2001 and 2011. There were increases in the other main religious group categories, with the number of Muslims increasing the most (from 3.0 per cent to 4.8 per cent).
Of the other main religious groups, 1.5% of people identified themselves as Hindu in 2011; 0.8% as Sikh; 0.5% as Jewish; and 0.4% as Buddhist.
That means just 8% of the population have religious cultures which are not Christian, but I don’t know any who are actively campaigning against Christian festivals in the UK. Of course, if we had as many Muslims in the general population as there are in Tower Hamlets (36%) it would be different. Indeed, in Tower Hamlets it is different. Muslims are in every political party there and they have a Muslim majority which cuts across party affiliations.
Perhaps we all ought to come back here in 2042 and see what it looks like then. But as things stand today, Muslims cannot demand the whole population celebrate Eid Al Fitr from a population base of less than 5%.
Actually, the talk about ‘multi-culturalism’, the restriction on advertising oin libraries by a Christian environmentalist group, all the barmy ‘winterval’ stuff, comes not from religious minorities, but from secularist activists in diversity units using the presence of faiths other than Christian in the UK as a stick with which to beat the Christianity they so hate with a passion.
It’s not just the UK. The decision of the National Agency for Education (NEA) in Sweden to ban all references to ‘God’ and ‘Jesus’ during school Advent services is out of the same atheist box.
We have 8 bank holidays in the United Kingdom. Five out of the eight days are based on Christian festivals, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Whitsun, Christmas Day and Boxing Day (St Stephen’s Day). And so they should be.
New Year’s Day, May Day and the August Bank Holiday are atheist, so three out of eight days in a year seems to flatter the atheist population somewhat.
The fact is, this is historically a Christian country with a Christian monarch and a Christian constitution.
Our laws still derive from the laws of Alfred the Great, who based his ‘dooms’ on the five books of Moses, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy, all of which were endorsed by the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Old Testament has more of a societal emphasis and the New Testament focuses more on the individual. Nevertheless, a common thread that all societal institutions, individual, family, state, corporate worship, relate to and derive their authority from Almighty God runs all the way through, from Genesis to Revelation.
The fact is, Christianity is an unashamed force for individual and societal good throughout the world.
Look at how many hospitals are named after saints. London has St George’s, St Bartholomew’s and St Thomas’s, and Tommy’s neighbour Guy’s was also a Christian foundation. In Manchester there is Saint Mary’s. In Bradford, St Luke’s. In Oldham, All Saints. In Ashford Saint Peter’s. The Knights Hospitaller provided succour to travellers throughout these islands and the world in the middle ages. The Church provided for the poor for centuries until the modern state decided that was its responsibility.
I have yet to hear of someone leaving a life of crime, packing up drugs, stopping self-harming, getting out of prostitution, by becoming an atheist. But I know many people delivered from these things by the power of Jesus Christ. Their testimonies are all over the web.
I have yet to hear of an atheist starting up an orphanage at his own expense, as the Christian Thomas Barnado did in the 1860s.
Or of an atheist campaigning at his own expense, unsupported by public money, against slavery, as William Wilberforce did in the early 19th century.
Or to limit factory and working hours, set up schools for the children of city slums, champion the cause of chimney sweeps’ boys and improve housing conditions for ordinary men and women, as the Christian philanthropist Lord Shaftsbury did in the med nineteenth-century.
And of course these Christians went about their philanthropy precisely because of the incarnation of Jesus Christ we celebrate at Christmas. God was interested enough and involved enough in our human condition to become one of us at a point in history. Jesus Christ, Immanuel, ‘God with us’, healed the sick, comforted the bereaved, even raised the dead, taught the good news and commanded men to repent.
He set an example for us to follow. He told Christians they would be judged and rewarded in the kingdom of God not by how many prayers they made, but by how closely they kept faith in him, kept his commandments and dealt with their fellow human beings. He was among us as one who serves.
That is the heritage Christ Jesus left behind, that is why we should celebrate his birth at Christmas, his liberating death and resurrection at Easter and why we should fight to preserve his faith in this United Kingdom.
So finally, I can do no better than to wish you all a Merry Christmas.
Read:
Luke 22:25-27, Matt 25:34-40, Gal 6:9 and 2Thess 3:13
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A senior politician threatened journalists investigating her expenses, according to the newspaper concerned.
An aide to Maria Miller told reporters at the Daily Telegraph to ‘think about’ the implications of exposing Maria Miller’s possible misuse of parliamentary expenses to house her parents.
The amount of taxpayers’ money involved is said to be an astonishing £90,000.
The Culture Secretary is currently promoting the abomination of ‘gay marriage’ in the House of Commons.
‘When a reporter approached Mrs Miller’s office last Thursday, her special adviser, Joanna Hindley, pointed out that the Editor of The Telegraph was involved in meetings with the Prime Minister and the Culture Secretary over implementing the recommendations made by Lord Justice Leveson.
‘“Maria has obviously been having quite a lot of editors’ meetings around Leveson at the moment. So I am just going to kind of flag up that connection for you to think about,” said Miss Hindley.
‘Miss Hindley also said the reporter should discuss the issue with “people a little higher up your organisation”.’
The paper went ahead with the story after checking the facts again, and Mrs Miller has now been reported to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards by John Mann MP.
Mr Mann said that the arrangement was “identical” to that of the former Labour minister Tony McNulty, who in 2009 was required to pay back more than £13,000 in expenses claimed on a second home occupied by his parents.
Mrs Miller claimed more than £90,000 on a house in Wimbledon, south-west London, between 2005 and 2009, where her parents lived with her family.
A spokesman for Mrs Miller said the parents lived with the family “as dependants.” The parliamentary commissioner John Lyon stated in his report on Mr McNulty that this was unacceptable.
Aides for Mrs Miller also insisted that her arrangements were approved by the parliamentary fees office and audited twice. Mr McNulty’s expenses were also approved by the fees office, while Sir Thomas Legg, who carried out an audit of MPs’ expenses, emphasised that his review was limited in scope and pointed out that the fees office was “vulnerable” to MPs’ interests.
When the Daily Telegraph first exposed duck ponds and moats being claimed on parliamentary expenses politicians claimed at that time they were doing everything ‘within the rules’.
The story shows how those in favour of overturning God’s righteous commandments in one area can have difficulty applying basic standards of morality in other areas as well.
It also gives a glimpse into why poiliticians are always so keen to muzzle the press.
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Domenic as a young child, with his mother, Annie, who has been declared by the Gotland District Court to be a normal, loving and competent parent.
An appeals court has handed down a verdict that Domenic Johansson will not be returned to his parents, following a separation of three and a half years.
Ironically, the decision was rendered yesterday, the day that is celebrated throughout the world as Human Rights Day 2012.
“A New Kind of Injustice”
The Johansson parents were vindicated in June when the Gotland District gave them full parental rights. The verdict was issued on the basis of unanimous and extensive testimony from those who had first-hand experience with Christer and Annie Johansson. In establishing that the Johansson parents are capable, loving and normal, the testimonies demonstrated that the Swedish social services do not have a case for continuing to divide the family. The court responded to this evidence by acknowledging that the parents had been properly caring for Domenic and that their parental rights would not be terminated.
Following the ruling, Christer Johansson spoke with Christian Voice researcher, Robin Phillips, declaring that it was no longer a question of if but when. However, as the Johansson’s and their extended family prepared to welcome Domenic back, Swedish social services appealed to the Svea Court of Appeal, asking them to overturn the district court’s ruling. Moreover, they kept Domenic during the period of the appeal.
Domenic has now been separated from his parents for three and a half years
During the time of the appeal social services brought forward evidence from an “expert” child psychiatrist who stated that it would be detrimental to Domenic’s “mental health and well-being” to have him returned to the parents.
Christer commented, “We have not felt pain like this ever. I am taking care of Annie as she’s still in shock. I thought we could start to celebrate something soon, but after this ‘news’ it’s impossible to even think about smiling. To get news like this on the International Human Right’s Day is…a new kind of injustice for sure.”
Meanwhile, this sad drama is now attracting international attention. The Facebook group ‘Return Domenic Johansson to His Parents!’ now has an astonishing 5,141 members while Christians throughout the world are preparing for a renewed letter writing campaign (details will be forthcoming.)
The Next Step
The next step is that the Johansson’s lawyer plans to appeal to the highest court in Sweden. If that fails, they plan to appeal again to the European Court of Human Rights, which earlier refused the case based on the decision of a judge from Germany (another country ruled by a government that ruthlessly persecutes homeschoolers in violation of the most fundamental international human rights conventions). The family are being assisted by the Alliance Defence Fund, who have put together an application that makes the following points:
“…the main area of contention between the Respondent and the Johansson’s was that Domenic was being home educated. The family had been doing so in large part because of their desire to pursue missionary work in India and to be closer to the mother’s family [as Annie is a citizen of India]. The Johansson’s had sought the textbooks from their local school principal because it was their desire that even while in India Domenic be brought up learning both the Indian and the Swedish curriculum. The end result was that Domenic was dramatically abducted by state social services while on the airplane en route to their new life in India helping orphaned children.
This case personifies an abuse of the dominant majority position. Social services intervened into the private family life of the Johansson’s because they disagreed with the family’s belief system making value judgments which are not permissible under Convention law. Rather than remaining neutral in its functions, the State actively discriminated against the family for holding beliefs which differed from the majority viewpoint. The value judgments made against the Johansson’s by social services, lacking in any serious investigation or provable fact, were then used to destroy the applicant family. These same judgements, which continue to exist without fact or serious evidence, persist in keeping the family separated.
[The] desire to permanently extinguish parental rights, even with all obstacles to reunification being removed, became very apparent when Gotland Social Services motioned the distinct court to transfer full custody to an extraneous legal guardian. The court refused to issue an interim decision and ruled on 09 December 2011, that Social Services did not have grounds to take such extreme measures. Of note during this hearing is that this was the first time in the more than two and a half years since Domenic was taken into care that the family was allowed to use a lawyer of their own choosing.
The State cannot take such radical methods as separating families simply for the act of home education or because it does not like the religious philosophies of the family; particularly where the weight of the evidence lacks grounds to substantiate such severs measures as to take Domenic into custody and disallow him his right guaranteed in Protocol 4, Article 2 [Freedom of Movement], to travel to India to be with his parents and extended family there. Such a deprivation hinders the evolving capacities of the child and is to the detriment of the best interests of the child standard set in international law.
READ: Psalm 9:8.
PRAY: Christmas is a time when we enjoy being with family and friends. It is a time when we are surrounded by those we love, sharing in the warmth and peace made possible by the Christ child. But this Christmas Domenic will not be experiencing warmth and peace, because of the cold injustice of a system that has removed him from his loving family and refuses to let him return home. A year ago we waged our “No Christmas for Domenic” campaign to draw attention to this sad reality, and the horrific travesty of justice behind it. Now as we prepare to celebrate another Christmas, the situation remains the same. Pray that this will be Domenic’s last Christmas away from his family. Ask that the Johansson’s legal team would be given wisdom as they prepare to approach the highest court in Sweden.
WRITE: to the Swedish Ambassador: Her Excellency Nicola Clase, 27 Portland Place, London, W1B 1QA (that is her official residence) or at the Swedish Embassy in London, 11 Montagu Place, London, W1H 2AL
If you live outside the UK , merely put your own capital city in place of London and address your email to ‘The Swedish Ambassador’ and start ‘Your Excellency’. For example:
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David Davies, who represents Monmouth, made his comments over the weekend.
The Christian Voice National Director spoke about the issue on Radio Leeds this morning.
Stephen Green said today: ‘ Most parents want their children to have children themselves. They want to be grandparents. It is how Almighty God has designed us. But that is not all. Parents want the best for their children, and anyone who knows anything about the homosexual life would not wish its depravity and emptiness on anyone.
A Sexual Dead-End
In his book The Sexual Dead-End, Stephen Green quoted a number of homosexuals who spoke about their lives.
A man called “Jeremy” wrote in the Evening Standard Magazine (08/01/88): ‘The gay is more visually aware than a hetero; he’ll see something in a shop that he wants, he’ll see others running around with it and instantly he’ll feel “I must have it!” … We’re talking about an almost psychopathic fashion-consciousness. At the end of the day it’s always a search – and this is what makes it irrational and hard to please – for true love. If I have a lovely home, I’ll impress someone who’ll adore me. If I get a new hairstyle, or a new car, or the cassette recorder, I’ll be loved as well. Much of gay consumerism boils down to a constant search for Mr. Right.’
The late Quentin Crisp was a stereotypical queen, and observed that the effeminate homosexual in particular desires nothing more than the love of a real man. Yet a real man will not love a homosexual, ergo the search is unending.
Activist John Shiers, in a sad piece of writing, defended his involvement in what he describes as the “gay world” with poignant honesty: ‘I choose to use commercial gay facilities; I consent to the one-night stands; I also have a fairly satisfying and enjoyable social life quite independent of all this. Yet my choices are not “free”: I have needs which gnaw away under the surface and which gay bars, clubs and sex do provide temporary relief for. But it is temporary; the underlying issues remain and I have no idea how to begin to go about fully understanding them, let alone sorting them out in such a way as to give me a constant feeling of personal integration. (John Shiers in (ed Gay Left) “Homosexuality Power and Politics” Allison & Busby London 1980 p146)
Trying to stay young
When a regular on the homosexual “scene” grows old, there becomes progressively less that “gay consumerism,” or fashion, can do to help him maintain his “sex appeal”:
‘As we grow older we continue to slide up the line between “young” and “old.” A really young faggot usually tries to look and act older because of the drinking and age of consent laws. But most of us try desperately to look younger than we are. As we age, we resort to a whole array of hair pieces, contact lenses, sprays, sun lamps, oils and other artifices to look younger. We run after the latest fashion of the young consumer market hoping to find some magic fountain of youth. …
‘Older gays just aren’t happy with each other’s company generally …. Or if we are willing to share our time and lives with older homosexuals, we often draw a strict line between sex and company, preferring sex with young strangers (often anonymous) and camaraderie with others our own age. Couples over thirty are an exception, and they have usually met before one or both became thirty.’ (Charley Shively in “Pink Triangles” edited Pam Mitchell, Alyson Publications Boston 1980 p77)
‘It was a sordid life. As you get older, anything good about homosexuality passes away and you are left with all of the bad things. You no longer are attractive and you cannot make contact. You have to pay for any sex you get. And then there is no involvement, there is no love. No friendship is involved; just a business transaction.’ ((Interview in Philpot “The Gay Theology” Logos 1977 p17)
Nobody loves a fairy when she’s forty
Arthur Le Clerq was responsible for writing many of George Formby’s songs, often with double-entendre. But there was scarcely any hiding the meaning of his 1934 offering, which had the following chorus:
‘Nobody loves a fairy when she’s forty,
‘Nobody loves a fairy when she’s old,
‘She may still have a magic power but that is not enough,
‘They like their bit of magic from a younger bit of stuff.
‘When once your silver star has lost its glitter,
‘And your tinsel looks like rust instead of gold,
‘Fairy days are ending when your wand has started bending,
‘No-one loves a fairy when she’s old.’
That is the stark reality of the homosexual life, and no parent would want a child anywhere near it. We should pray that parents will be alert to attempts through school sex-education to groom their children for homosexuality.
We should also pray that more churches would be moved to minister the healing power of the Lord Jesus to those struggling with same-sex attraction. No-one has to ‘stay gay’.
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Government has acknowledged that the concept of consummation will not apply to members of the same-sex
The campaign to introduce same-sex ‘marriage’ has descended into a farce as Government is acknowledging that the concept of consummation and non-consummation will be inapplicable to ‘marriages’ conducted by homosexuals.
In it’s response to the consultation on same-sex ‘marriage’, published earlier today, Government has conceded that two homosexuals can never be one flesh.
Just as same-sex ‘marriages’ will be incapable of consummation, so Government has also decided that it will be impossible for anyone to commit adultery with a member of the same sex. The only way a homosexual will be able to commit adultery will be to first become heterosexual or bisexual.
In footnotes, the Government say:
10 Consummation is defined in English common law. Consummation requires ‘ordinary and complete’ sexual intercourse. Penetration for a short period without emission inside or outside the wife has been held to be incomplete intercourse and, therefore, not consummation of a marriage (see W (otherwise K) –v- W [1967] 3 All ER 178n).
12 Adultery is currently defined as follows: there must be at least partial penetration of the female by the male for the act of adultery to be proved. The attempt to commit adultery must not be confused with the act itself, and if there is no such penetration, some lesser act of sexual gratification does not amount to adultery (c.f. Dennis v Dennis [1955] 2 ALL ER 51 2WLR 817).
The latter is an open admission that whatever homosexual couples get up to in their bedrooms – or bathrooms – these are ‘lesser acts of sexual gratification’. In reality, the Government are admitting that ‘gay marriages’ are not marriages at all. They are a joke.
To make it even more ludicrous, the Government say, ‘The vows which are spoken as part of the marriage ceremony are able to remain the same, with couples being referred to as ‘husband’ and ‘husband’, or ‘wife’ and ‘wife’ for legal purposes.’ One would need a heart of stone not to laugh.
If Parliament passes the gay marriage bill, then same-sex couples will be able to legally ‘marry’ in England and Wales, but it will not affect Scotland or Northern Ireland. The law would also allow a person to legally change his or her gender while remaining married.
Meanwhile, Scotland has introduced its own plans to introduce same-sex ‘marriage’ and have already published proposed legislation in order to gather feedback from the public. Their current consultation will run until 20 March, 2013.
A Two-Tier System
The implication of Government’s response to the consultation is a two-tier system, in which same-sex ‘marriages’ will be governed by a separate infrastructure to that of traditional marriages. The four main areas where this difference would be evident are:
Consummation. The document says that Government is “proposing to create an exception for same-sex couples in a marriage, meaning that they would not be able cite non-consummation as a basis for annulling their marriage.”
Adultery. Government continues to define adultery as involving “at least partial penetration of the female by the male” and this act continues to be grounds for divorce. Thus, same-sex couple will not be able to cite adultery as grounds for divorce unless one partner has become involved with someone of the opposite gender.
Civil Partnerships. Civil partnerships will continue to only be available to members of the same-sex, who will be free to convert the civil partnership into ‘marriages’ should they desire. This provision will continue to be unavailable to heterosexual couples. This may well be a temporary state of affairs if the take-up of civil partnerships dwindles in comparison to that for ‘gay marriages’.
Church Services. By law the Church of England will still only be allowed to offer marriages to heterosexual couples. Other denominations will be free (at least ostensibly) to make up their own minds.
Because same-sex couples will be falling under a separate legal infrastructure to that of heterosexual couples, it will be only a matter of time before some mischievous heterosexual cries, “Not fair! We must have access to the same type of marriage that same-sex couples can enjoy.” Or visa versa.
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THe Entrance to the site of the proposed West Ham 'mega mosque'.
The Abbey Mills site of Tablighi Jamaat’s proposed ‘megamosque’
A planning application for a massive ‘megamosque’ in West Ham has been refused planning permission, but Christian leaders are warning the battle is far from over.
Local Councillors agreed with Newham planning officers that the proposed design was not appropriate and refused it, saying it did not fit with their vision of bringing housing and jobs to the area.
Planning officers tabled the application, put in by a charity behind the group Tablighi Jamaat, for refusal last week, reported the London Evening Standard.
Thousands of Muslims supporting the sect demonstrated outside Stratford Town Hall last night, and were countered in the spiritual realm by a prayer vigil organised by members of Christian Voice. Some members also reported having great conversations with Muslims, who view Jesus Christ as a mere prophet, superceded by Mohammed. They were able to show that Jesus was and is the Son of God, and pointed out that if Allah denies having begotten a son, then Allah and the Almighty are not the same being.
Christian Voice members have been meeting for prayer at the site of the proposed development on the first Saturday morning of every month since January 2007. They met on Saturday 6th April 2013 from 10.30am to 12.30. The next meeting is Saturday 4th May 2013.
The proposed mosque would be the size of Battersea Power Station and would dominate the Abbey Mills area, according to the architect submitting the proposal. It would accomodate 12,000 devotees, and be the largest place of worship in Britain, as well as the headquarters of Tablighi Jamaat, the separatist group who own the land.
Stephen Green, National Director of Christian Voice, said today:
‘We give thanks to God that councillors agreed with their planning officers last night despite massive pressure from Muslims supporting the proposal.
‘The battle is far from over and the focus of our prayer must now shift to Bristol and the appeals process. But the unanimous vote and what appear to have been robust grounds for refusal were welcome at this stage.’
COME ALONG to the next prayer meeting at West Ham: Saturday 4th May 2013 (and every first Saturday in the month thereafter). Meet at the site where the Greenway pedestrian path crosses Canning Road. Aim for Channel Sea House at E15 3ND.
If coming by foot, take the DLR from Stratford or West Ham to Abbey Road. Turn right out of the station, and left up Canning Road. We meet at the top on the left on the Greenway. Check at Transport for London for ‘planned engineering works’ to the Tube.
If coming by car, turn into Mitre Road which becomes Abbey Road, turn left into Canning Road, park at Channel Sea House at the end and just walk 50 yards back to the Greenway. You can also approach from the other direction: From the A118 High Street turn into Abbey Road. SatNav: E15 3ND.
PLEASE COME and stand up for Christ whatever the weather and be challenged and blessed! (Phil 1:27-29). The meeting is always a peaceful time of fellowship, worship and seeking the Lord in prayer and in His word.
PRAY: That there is a good turn-out with powerful prayer for our nation. Pray that God will bless our nation with repentance and that His enemies, whether Secularist or Islamic, will be converted to the cause of Christ, or that their plans will come to nothing before our holy and awesome God. Who is on the Lord’s side? Come along and stand with us!
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Ye clouds and darkness, hosts of night
That breed confusion and affright,
Begone! o’erhead the dawn shines clear,
The light breaks in and Christ is here.
Earth’s gloom flees broken and dispersed,
By the sun’s piercing shafts coerced:
The daystar’s eyes rain influence bright
And colours glimmer back to sight.
So shall our guilty midnight fade,
The sin-stained heart’s gross dusky shade:
So shall the King’s All-radiant Face
Sudden unveil our deep disgrace.
No longer then may we disguise
Our dark intents from those clear eyes:
Yea, at the dayspring’s advent blest
Our inmost thoughts will stand confest.
So opens the ‘Morning Hymn’ of the 4th century Christian poet Aurelius Prudentius Clemens. (To read the rest of the poem, click here.)
Aurelius’ poem captures the spirit of the season we are now celebrating, the season of Advent. The hymn reminds us that in the early church the season of Advent was a time when Christians anticipated Christ’s second coming. (To read about the history of Advent, see the article at the Chuck Colson Center, ‘Cheer Our Spirits by Thine Advent.‘) It was a time when they expectantly waited for Him to come and judge the earth, scattering the darkness with His light.
Boniface’s Challenge to the Powers of Darkness
The theme of light conquering darkness was the message that Boniface took to the ancient Germans in the 8th century.
When Boniface penetrated into the dark forests of Northern Europe, there was little doubt that he was fighting against the principalities and powers of darkness. As we explain in our brief biography of Boniface, this was a time when the power of the occult was very strong. But Boniface knew that the power of Christ was stronger. Not only was Boniface unafraid to challenge these dark powers with the light of Christ, but he relished the opportunity to demonstrate the superior power of Christ.
As Boniface boldly marched forward to challenge the raw paganism that surrounded him, he may well have taken courage from singing Aurelius’s Advent hymn, especially the first stanza:
Ye clouds and darkness, hosts of night
That breed confusion and affright,
Begone! o’erhead the dawn shines clear,
The light breaks in and Christ is here.
The theme of God judging dark powers with the light of Christ is now largely absent from our Advent celebrations. Yet this theme is implicit in the long forgotten roots of many of our culture’s Advent traditions, including Advent candles and Advent wreaths.
Interestingly, many people trace both Advent wreaths and Christmas trees back to Boniface. Some of these legends surround the following incident that occurred shortly after Boniface struck down Thor’s sacred oak tree.
Advent Wreaths and Christmas Trees
On a cold evening in December, a young boy rushed into Boniface’s camp. The lad reported that his 15-year old sister was about to be offered as a vestal sacrifice to the gods of the forest.
Boniface and a small band of disciples wasted no time. They quickly followed the boy back to the site where the terrible event was about to take place. Not a moment too early, they entered the grove just in time to see the witch doctor raising his stone knife.
As the blade began its downwards descent towards the breasts of the young maiden, Boniface hurled himself forward, simultaneously knocking over the priest and receiving on himself the blow of the knife. Providentially, the knife embedded itself in a small wooden cross that Boniface was wearing around his person. The cross was pierced in two but the missionary’s life was preserved.
Even as the stunned witch doctor shrieked curses at the monk, Boniface turned towards the spectators and began telling of an ultimate sacrifice that had already been offered. According to some of the legends, Boniface used the druid’s knife to cut down fir boughs, even as he preached to the crowd about Christ’s finished work on the tree of Cavalry. Because the light of Christ had defeated the darkness of death, Boniface explained, there was no longer any need for additional sacrifices. Since God had judged and defeated the dark powers, it was futile to pay homage to them.
As he spoke, Boniface passed out pieces of the fir boughs he was cutting down, and urged the onlookers to tie them into wreaths as a memorial of the provision achieved by Christ. Legend has it that this occurred on the first Sunday in Advent and that this was the origin of Advent wreaths.
This was significant, because at the time wreaths had been used to appease the sun god during the period of his winter hiding. As the Chapel Hill Presbyterian church explained, “They would take a cart wheel, wound with greens and decorated with lights, string them up in the halls of the tribes of northern Europe and whirl them on Winter Solstice. The pagans in essence would ‘sacrifice’ the use of a cart wheel and ponder the blessings of light and life and implored the sun god to return to them.” Boniface invested the wreath with a new meaning, using it as a reminder of Christ’s victory. No longer would the wreath symbolize the idolatry of paganism,, but the glory of Christ’s victory over the grave.
The Christmas tree, it is said, also owes its origins to Boniface. According to one set of legends narrated here, Boniface gave the balsam fir tree to the Druids in place of the oak tree, the symbol of their idol. He said, ‘The fir tree is the wood of peace, the sign of an endless life with its evergreen branches. It points to heaven. It will never shelter deeds of blood, but rather be filled with loving gifts and rites of kindness.’
Stephen Mansfield tells us how Martin Luther, familiar with these legends, attached importance to the Christmas tree in honour of Boniface’s “conquering of Germany for Christ.”
To read more about Boniface and other Christian heroes, check out our page of spiritual biographies.
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Homosexual activists are urging multinational companies to usurp democracy in Uganda.
Patrick Strudwick, an agent provocateur who posed as a Christian seeking healing for same-sex attraction in order to attack Christian counsellor Lesley Pilkington, is leading the charge.
In an email, Strudwick writes:
‘In a matter of days — possibly even hours — Uganda’s parliament is set to pass the so-called “Kill the Gays” bill, which could enshrine in law the death penalty for LGBT people. Their Speaker described the bill as a “Christmas gift” for the Ugandan people.
‘Activists in Uganda say that one way to stop this is by putting pressure on powerful international banks in the country to condemn the bill.
‘Barclays and Citibank both have millions of pounds invested in Uganda and wield a huge influence on the government. A public statement from Barclays speaking out against the “Kill the Gays” bill might be the best chance to stop it and save gay people from being executed.
‘Both banks have supported human rights for LGBT people in the Europe and the US. Barclays is one of the UK’s top employers for LGBT people and prides itself on its work championing gay equality in Britain, which is why I’ve been a customer of theirs for years.
‘If these banks speak out against the bill the Ugandan government will see the huge risk posed to business and their economy if they forge ahead with it.
‘That’s why I’ve started a petition’ … he drones on.
There are two main things wrong with this outpouring from a character described as ‘Smugtwit’ and one of ‘Britain’s two most boring gay men’ by a homosexual blogger.
The second is that the Bill of which he complains is not remotely a ‘kill the gays’ measure anyway.
Now, in its first draft it did provide for the death penalty for those who use the act of sodomy to infect others with HIV/Aids, and those who sodomise children. What penalty would Strudwick want to see for such paragons of ‘gay virtue’? Nothing? An award of ‘Infectious Personality of the Year’ in next year’s Stonewall awards?
It also addressed an anomaly in which those found guilty of rape face the death penalty but those convicted of forced sodomy do not. Again, what penalty does Strudwick think is appropriate for homosexuals who violate others like that? ‘Sports Award of the Year’, perhaps, sponsored as it was this year, by Barclays?
The true reason behind the Bill, introduced three years ago by Ugandan ruling party members David Bahati, is to protect Uganda’s children from being recruited into the homosexual lifestyle by wealthy Western pederasts.
A secondary problem addressed by the Bill is the promotion of sodomy by Western NGO’s such as Jon Stryker’s Arcus Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Dutch humanist group Hivos and George Soros’s ‘Open Society’. On top of all that is the ‘strings-attached’ foreign aid from the US, the EU and Britain. The East Aftican homosexual propaganda industry is entirely funded by rich homosexuals and their friends in the West.
Simon Lokodo, the Minister for ‘Ethics and Integrity’ plans to ban 38 different organisations that are currently promoting homosexuality if the Bill becomes law. It is the Bill’s clamp-down on their proselytisation which most annoys Western homosexuals, and the loss of an exotic playground where adolescent boys can be enticed with a couple of dollars.
The Speaker of the Ugandan Parliament, Rebecca Kadaga, told The Associated Press on Monday 12th November that the bill will become law this year.
The Hon Rebecca Kadaga, Speaker of the Ugandan Parliament.
Ugandans “are demanding it,” she said, reiterating a promise she made before a meeting on Friday of anti-gay activists who spoke of “the serious threat” posed by homosexuals to Uganda’s children. Some Christian clerics at the meeting in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, asked the speaker to pass the law as “a Christmas gift.”
“Speaker, we cannot sit back while such (a) destructive phenomenon is taking place in our nation,” the activists said in a petition. “We therefore, as responsible citizens, feel duty-bound to bring this matter to your attention as the leader of Parliament … so that lawmakers can do something to quickly address the deteriorating situation in our nation.”
The anti-gay activists paraded in front of Mrs Kadaga, with parents and schoolchildren holding up signs saying homosexuality is “an abomination.” The speaker then promised to consider the bill within two weeks, declaring that “the power is in our hands.”
“Who are we not to do what they have told us? These people should not be begging us,” Mrs Kadaga said of activists who want the bill to become law.
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The President of Uganda has repented of past sins and dedicated his nation to Almighty God.
President Yoweri Museveni made history last month at the National Jubilee Prayers in Namboole, when he openly repented of his sins and the sins of Uganda, according to Moses Mulondo of New Vision.
Uganda has been targetted in recent years by wealthy Western homosexual activists, furious at that country’s opposition to pro-sodomy activism.
Both President Museveni and First Lady Janet Museveni have warned of the dangers posed to individuals and society by sodomy. But the subject did not warrant a mention in the President’s prayer, as he concentrated on repentance for sins and rededication of the nation to God.
President Museveni said:
Father God in heaven, today we stand here as Ugandans, to thank you for Uganda. We are proud that we are Ugandans and Africans. We thank you for all your goodness to us.
I stand here today to close the evil past and especially in the last 50 years of our national leadership history and at the threshold of a new dispensation in the life of this nation. I stand here on my own behalf and on behalf of my predecessors to repent. We ask for your forgiveness.
We confess these sins, which have greatly hampered our national cohesion and delayed our political, social and economic transformation.
We confess sins of idolatry and witchcraft which are rampant in our land. We confess sins of shedding innocent blood, sins of political hypocrisy, dishonesty, intrigue and betrayal.
Forgive us of sins of pride, tribalism and sectarianism; sins of laziness, indifference and irresponsibility; sins of corruption and bribery that have eroded our national resources; sins of sexual immorality, drunkenness and debauchery; sins of unforgiveness, bitterness, hatred and revenge; sins of injustice, oppression and exploitation; sins of rebellion, insubordination, strife and conflict.
These sins and many others have characterised our past leadership, especially the last 50 years of our history. Lord forgive us and give us a new beginning. Give us a heart to love you, to fear you and to seek you. Take away from us all the above sins.
We pray for national unity. Unite us as Ugandans and eliminate all forms of conflict, sectarianism and tribalism. Help us to see that we are all your children, children of the same Father. Help us to love and respect one another and to appreciate unity in diversity.
We pray for prosperity and transformation. Deliver us from ignorance, poverty and disease. As leaders, give us wisdom to help lead our people into political, social and economic transformation.
We want to dedicate this nation to you so that you will be our God and guide. We want Uganda to be known as a nation that fears God and as a nation whose foundations are firmly rooted in righteousness and justice to fulfil what the Bible says in Psalm 33:12: Blessed is the nation, whose God is the Lord. A people you have chosen as your own.
I renounce all the evil foundations and covenants that were laid in idolatry and witchcraft. I renounce all the satanic influence on this nation. And I hereby covenant Uganda to you, to walk in your ways and experience all your blessings forever.
I pray for all these in the name of the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Christian Leaders React
The Church of Uganda Archbishop elect, Stanley Ntagali said the prayer was a step in the right direction. That it was appropriate for the head of state to repent of his sins and the sins of Ugandans.
The leader of Pentecostal churches, Apostle Alex Mitala, said the prayer was the beginning of the healing of a nation. “All the nations we read about in the Bible were healed when their leaders repented and acknowledged God’s supremacy,” he said. Mitala urged Ugandans to turn away from their wicked ways.
Pastor Dr. Martin Kalibbala of New Testament Covenant Church warned that the fruits of repentance are what matter. “If you repent of stealing, God expects you to immediately stop stealing. If the President’s repentance is genuine, it will be measured on God’s yardstick of bearing the fruits of repentance,” he said.
Pastor Dr. Martin Ssempa of Makerere Community Church said it was a good thing for the President to repent on his behalf and on behalf of the nation. He commended those who encouraged and helped the President prepare the prayer, adding that God will answer it.
“We hope the President’s repentance will result into greater obedience to God by the executive, which he heads.”
Stephen Green of Christian Voice in the United Kingdom said: “President Museveni has set a standard which other national leaders would do well to emulate. All the sins which the President has identified in Uganda are present in Britain and America under different names. All governments need to root out corruption, wickedness and injustice and return to God.”
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