Chairman's Blog
Engaging with post-Brexit politics
I've written for LifeSite about the possibilities for Catholics to engage with the new generation of politicians who have emerged from Brexit: despite their greater distance from the practice of Christianity than their predecessors.
It begins:
There is a theory going around that Britain’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, is going to grasp a historic opportunity to realign his Conservative Party in relation to emerging voting patterns. It goes like this. Johnson’s predecessor-but-one, David Cameron, combined austerity and globalisation with social liberalism, notably by forcing “same-sex marriage” through Parliament, against great opposition from inside his own party. This did much to neutralise the opposition of the liberal media and arts establishment.
But things have moved on. The hyper-liberalism of the political left has cut them adrift from their traditional working-class supporters, who value family and country. Public finances don’t look quite as bad as before. The vote to leave the European Union and the ferocious opposition to this by the political and media establishment has crystalized the break between the left and its traditional base. Johnson’s strategy will be to pivot the Conservative Party into a more socially conservative, but less capitalist-friendly, party, to scoop up these newly available votes.
Serving and Sewing for the Kingdom of God
What can we do to advance God's reign on earth? What does it mean, today, to work in the Vineyard? If you are in despair about state of the Church and the state of society, what can you actually do about it?
It is far from the case that you can't do anything. The work of resistance to the chaos and of restoration is going on all around you. Here are two examples taking place in London: training on how to serve the Traditional Mass by highly experienced Masters of Ceremonies, and the mending of old vestments under expert guidance. Stop complaining, and come along! You don't need any qualifications, and there is no fee to pay.
Photos from last Saturday. The next dates are
March 14th (booking page for the serving), and May 9th (booking page for the serving). More info.
CMA Youth Retreat, 8th Feb, Haverstock Hill, London
Are Western Christians persecuted?
My latest on LifeSite.
Sex abuse clerical and lay
The second of a linked pair of LifeSite articles.
The latest Sex-abuse cover up: by Greater Manchest Police
The first of a pair of articles on LifeSite;
The Papal Slap
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A lot of people have weighed in on Pope Francis repeatedly slappingthe hand of a pilgrim in St Peter’s Square. Reactions have not divided simply along ideological lines. Austin Ruse suggested, on Twitter, that Pope Benedict and Pope John Paul II would have reacted even more fiercely to a pilgrim grabbing their hands and not letting go. I was undecided myself at first. The pilgrim’s action did seem a little aggressive. On the other hand, there she is, in the video, a rather small Chinese lady, making a sign of the cross to steel herself to take the hand of the much larger Pope, surrounded by body guards. From what one can see of the timing of the incident, the Pope reacts as he does not to the surprise of the physical aspect of the gesture, but to what she is saying. She is saying something about Hong Kong…
Read the rest on Rorate.
Roger Buck's 'Gentle Traditionalist' returns
My latest for LifeSite. Buy Roger Buck's latest book through this link which gives him a little more of the cover price.
Carry on reading there.
Learn to cook in 2020
My latest on LifeSite News
Support the Latin Mass Society
James MacMillan interview: music, culture, politics, religion
I've just round to watching this, and it is very interesting.
Sir James is a Patron of the Latin Mass Society.
He mentions a recent book of his reflections, which can be found here.