Christians could be targeted by the Government’s counter-extremism strategy, a bishop has said.
In a homily at Lourdes, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury said the Government strategy “struggles to define arbitrary values which might preserve society now confronted by aggressive ideologies and homicidal terror”.
He pointed out that the problem lies in how “extremism” is defined. A recent poll, he said, “allows [us] to glimpse what lies at the heart of this confusion: a ComRes Poll found that one in three Britons now regard the claims of Christianity and even the person of Jesus Christ as representing extremism”.
The poll, carried out for the Evangelical Alliance, found that 13 per cent of 2,004 respondents thought the Dalai Lama could be considered an extremist, 20 per cent said Gandhi could be considered an extremist while 25 per cent thought Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela could be considered as such. More than 40 per cent said people who believed marriage was only between a man and a woman were extremist.
Bishop Davies said: “There is a destructive extremism we ought to fear, one which seeks not only to deconstruct marriage and the family, but the very identity of the human person; which calls for medical experimentation with no reference to ethical boundaries; that decrees the unborn may live only to terms fixed by man, and demands legal protections be removed from the sick and the aged. It is such extremism which surely threatens the foundations of society. It is even possible,” the bishop said, “that the very faith in Christ on which our nation was built might become a focus of the Government’s counter-extremism agenda.”
Under the Prevent programme, public sector workers are expected to report individuals at risk of radicalisation to local authority panels.
Relics go on display in Durham
Relics of one of Britain’s earliest saints, St Cuthbert, have gone on display in Durham Cathedral.
The exhibition at the cathedral – which was built in his honour – centres on an oak coffin, made in Lindisfarne in AD 698, 11 years after Cuthbert’s death. Other exhibits include the saint’s pectoral cross – Cuthbert was called back from his hermit’s cell to become a bishop – and his ivory comb.
Areas of Catholic Herald business are still recovering post-pandemic.
However, we are reaching out to the Catholic community and readership, that has been so loyal to the Catholic Herald. Please join us on our 135 year mission by supporting us.
We are raising £250,000 to safeguard the Herald as a world-leading voice in Catholic journalism and teaching.
We have been a bold and influential voice in the church since 1888, standing up for traditional Catholic culture and values. Please consider donating.