HomeOp-EdParliament’s culture of death and the Church’s troubling silence

Parliament’s culture of death and the Church’s troubling silence

Published on

spot_img

IN THE 1980s, as a pre-med student at Trinity College Dublin, I attended a lecture that I was reminded of this week. Ireland’s State Pathologist, Professor John Harbison, presented a video demonstrating how abortions are performed: limbs systematically dismembered, a human life methodically destroyed. A couple of students fainted at the horror. I remember thinking at the time how this is marketed as simple healthcare, like having your appendix removed. The brutal reality, concealed behind sanitised language and closed doors, underscores why Parliament’s vote this week is so unconscionable.

On Tuesday, MPs voted 379 to 137 to decriminalise abortion for women at any stage of pregnancy. On Friday, MPs voted 314 to 291 for the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, to legalise assisted dying/suicide. In the span of one week, the Mother of Parliaments has chosen to normalise the act of ending life at both ends of the spectrum.

Yet we’ve heard nothing so far from the leaders of the Church of England – not a sermon, nor a statement, nor even a post on X – on the legalising of abortion to term and very little on the assisted dying Bill. In fact, the official Church of England ‘tweet of the day’ on Wednesday was merely a reminder that it is Refugee Week! The Church, once the moral conscience of the nation, seems to have gone missing when Britain needs it the most. Just two of the Church of England’s 108 bishops had made any comment (at the time of writing) about the abortion vote. The bishops of Oswestry and Fulham alone have released a statement via the new Anglican4Life Society, expressing ‘grave concern’ with this week’s abortion vote and lamenting that ‘respect for the God-given dignity of every human life is being eroded’.

The Antoniazzi amendment, which passed with a huge majority of 242 votes, eliminates all criminal penalties for women seeking abortions at any stage of pregnancy. Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi argues that it safeguards vulnerable women, referencing tragic cases such as Nicola Packer who was arrested following a stillbirth at 26 weeks. However, protecting women does not necessitate permitting unrestricted harm to the unborn.

Make no mistake about what Parliament has sanctioned. While 99 per cent of abortions occur before 20 weeks, this law eliminates any restrictions on late-term procedures that involve dismembering viable babies capable of surviving outside the womb. The brutality I witnessed in that Dublin lecture theatre is now legally protected at any stage of pregnancy.

I find this situation quite unbelievable. 

This vote, a so-called ‘free conscience vote’, saw 379 MPs endorse a law that contradicts every principle upon which our Christian civilisation was founded. Labour, Liberal Democrat, and even eight Conservative MPs, including the Shadow Education Secretary, lined up to support what previous generations would have recognised as infanticide.

How did we arrive at this point? How did a Parliament that begins each day with prayers, that employs official chaplains, and that operates ‘by the grace of God’, vote to normalise the very culture of death that Christianity has consistently opposed?

Where is Archbishop Stephen Cottrell of York, currently serving as the stand-in for the Archbishop of Canterbury, who himself had to retire in disgrace? Where are the 26 Lords Spiritual, who hold privileged seats in our legislature specifically to provide moral and spiritual guidance?

Nowhere to be heard.

This silence is particularly galling when contrasted with their vocal activism on other progressive causes. Climate change, inequality, refugees – on these issues, Anglican bishops eagerly take to microphones and op-ed pages. However, when confronted with legislation that would legalise the dismemberment of unborn children, they become inexplicably silent.

The Lords Spiritual will have the opportunity to speak when these Bills reach the upper chamber. However, many more individual bishops could have spoken out already. Just two have. They could have used their platforms, their pulpits, and their privileged positions to advocate for the most vulnerable members of our society. Instead, they have opted for silence.

This silence reveals something deeper than mere political cowardice; it exposes a senior Church leadership that has lost its way. Today’s Anglican leaders, exemplified by former Archbishop Welby, represent a managerial class more concerned with maintaining respectability than with defending the truth. They have conflated being ‘relevant’ with being faithful, trading prophetic witness for political correctness.

When your church sounds indistinguishable from a progressive NGO, why should anyone take it seriously?

Read it all in the Conservative Woman

Latest articles

Pray, Speak, Act: A Word from Bishop White Following the IRS Decision to Permit Church Endorsement of Political Candidates

People of God in Southern Ohio, “…Then he said unto them, ‘Give therefore to the...

Anglican Church of Kenya statement on the “State of the Nation”

ACK statement on the state of the nation 2025.07.11Download

Deepening Crisis in the Anglican Diocese of Highveld

The Anglican Diocese of Highveld is facing an unprecedented crisis under the leadership of...

Pastoral letter to the diocese of Oklahoma urging priests not to bring politics into the pulpit

Since 1954, the Johnson Amendment in the tax code has said that churches risk...

Has Living in Love and Faith come to an end? An open letter to the Archbishop of York

Dear Stephen I read with interest your address to York Diocesan Synod on 5th July, and...

More like this

Pray, Speak, Act: A Word from Bishop White Following the IRS Decision to Permit Church Endorsement of Political Candidates

People of God in Southern Ohio, “…Then he said unto them, ‘Give therefore to the...

Anglican Church of Kenya statement on the “State of the Nation”

ACK statement on the state of the nation 2025.07.11Download

Deepening Crisis in the Anglican Diocese of Highveld

The Anglican Diocese of Highveld is facing an unprecedented crisis under the leadership of...