The Borough Deans gathered for
lunch yesterday. What the role will mean exactly once the local governmental
structures of Surrey go through the solve et coagula of reform over the next
couple of years we are not sure. Nor are we sure what the elections to the
‘shadow authorities’ next year will bring, but expect a significant number of
Reform councillors to emerge whereas there are hardly any at the moment. And
Reform is a new and untried quantity: will it be, and be committed to being, a
constitutional party of the Right which operates within the boundaries of the
liberal-democratic order, or will it recklessly lay the groundwork for
something worse later? How are we to engage with this new situation?
A couple of weeks ago two members
of the congregation here who are local councillors were accosted by a member of
the public at an event who told them ‘When Nigel becomes Prime Minister there’s
a short rope with a long drop waiting for people like you’. Now on one level
this is the kind of loose-tongued rubbish people say when they are angry and
resentful, but on another it’s part of a worrying violence in public discourse
in a country where two MPs have been assassinated in recent years, where such
acts are not theoretical and people ought to be careful about what they say. Presuming my congregants' accuser was referring to the leader of Reform rather than a random Nigel we knew nothing of, I
ended up writing to Mr Farage, arguing that though he was not in any way
responsible for the words of a random supporter, nevertheless he was
responsible for the perception of his party and for not using violent rhetoric
or allowing it to be used without comment. That seemed to me a reasonable
action. This was a situation that came close to home as far as I was concerned,
and there was a principle involved that wasn’t exclusively tied to that
particular exchange, but to the whole of our public life. I am very reticent about this kind of involvement but I felt a certain weight on this occasion.
Christ got as far as calling King
Herod a fox, but his main concern was to probe beneath the surface of what
people said and did to the assumptions and deep spiritual structures that
produced those words and actions, and in the same way the Church now should not
be partisan but try to get people to step back from the noise and think about
what is going on and what their responsibilities are – not to expect change
from others, but from themselves. How many will listen is another question, but
it’s our best hope and our urgent task.
well said. wonder whether you will get a reply? Hope so.
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