Why was I not surprised? As the nation mourned the death of Captain Sir Tom, a beacon of hope and humility in a dark world, we were hit by a thunderbolt from a trendy, Church of England clergyman.
The Church specialises nowadays in sermons seen through the prism of the sanctimonious Left.
But the Reverend Jarel Robinson-Brown outdid himself. ‘The cult of Captain Tom is a cult of White British Nationalism,’ he declared on Twitter. ‘I will offer prayers for the repose of this kind and generous soul, but I will not be joining in the “National Clap” [for him].’
The Church specialises nowadays in sermons seen through the prism of the sanctimonious Left. But the Reverend Jarel Robinson-Brown outdid himself.
And so another large portion of the Church of England’s flock will have turned their eyes to Heaven, and declared they’d had enough.
If there is one thing the CofE really does not need when it is haemorrhaging churchgoers — down by up to 20 per cent in the past decade — it is clergymen such as the Rev Robinson-Brown attacking the values they hold dear.
Where does the Church find these people? This man had made his views clear repeatedly — he’d attacked the Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the Home Secretary Priti Patel and other Government ministers as ‘Oppressors’.
And yet he was given the coveted position of curate in the oldest church in the City of London, All Hallows by the Tower.
I’m all in favour of him expressing opinions when appropriate. But his declaration on Captain Tom was so loaded with anger it makes a mockery of the Christian doctrine of love.
Clergymen are at the heart of this country’s history — why else do the novels of Anthony Trollope or programmes such as The Vicar of Dibley strike such a chord?
As the nation mourned the death of Captain Sir Tom, a beacon of hope and humility in a dark world, we were hit by a thunderbolt from a trendy, Church of England clergyman.
Britons took to the streets to mark…
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