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Easter can correct society's 'bitterness and intolerance' – English bishop

Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury preaches at St. Columba's Church in Chester, Feb. 15, 2014. Photo courtesy of the Diocese of Shrewsbury.

Easter is not a time for political debate, but is rather an opportunity to encounter the pinnacle of the faith – Christ's death and resurrection, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury said in his homily for the feast.

At the April 21 Mass said at Shrewsbury Cathedral, Bishop Davies referred to increasing political bitterness and an indifference to Easter's significance.  

"Everything rests on the witness given by those who, on that first Easter morning, came to 'see and believe'; on the witness of the Apostles and their Successors who stand with Peter in testimony that 'God raised Jesus to life'," he said.

"In Christ's Resurrection, we see how human life is no longer destined for death but for everlasting life and happiness. This is the joy of Easter that never fades."

Easter is a celebration of the Christian foundation, he said, but it is not an excuse for clergyman to criticize on passing political opinions nor is it a time when political sentiments should be prioritized.

"All of our Christian faith and the whole of Christian civilisation depends on this Day," he said.

"[Political] choices ought not to concern us on this greatest day in the Christian Calendar," he further added.

This Easter has come at a time of much political strife, he said, noting that English society has seen a deterioration in people's civility toward those who hold opposing beliefs. As tolerance has declined so has the culture's comprehension of Easter and truth, he said.

"A deepening bitterness and intolerance in British society must surely be a concern for us all. It might even mark a change in our national character as disagreement and difference now too often leads to anger; enmity; no-platforming; and even threats of violence and death to those in public life."

"We might trace this breakdown in our civility and gentle tolerance to the loss of the greater horizons which Easter celebrates. In many western societies, we see a descent into an irrationalism in which there is only 'my truth' and 'your truth,' with no hope of basing our lives and society on what is enduringly and always true. Yet, passing questions of public policy must always be seen from the perspective of what is lasting."

He pointed to the 2010 visit of Benedict XVI to England, in which the then-pope "observed that if the only thing underpinning our democracy is an ever-changing social consensus, then the real challenge to democracy and social cohesion lies in our losing hold of the very truths which made our civilisation and society possible."

"It is in Christ – the only person ever to have said, 'I am the truth' – that we find the enduring truth about the human person which has long formed the basis of our civility, our understanding of human rights and of a rule of law worth defending."

As the British Parliament takes a break for Easter, pausing debate on Brexit, Bishop Davies applauded the respite. He expressed hope that this Easter would "return to the foundations that should always underpin our national debates."

"On this Easter Day, we hear Saint Paul urge the first believers to cast out everything that is malice and to seek 'sincerity and truth'. This is surely the path we, too, should take for the healing of society and the recovery of our tolerance."

"May the light of this Easter Day lead us gently as a nation to 'see and believe' God's great purpose for us, and so to recognise anew the truth by which we and all of human society can be saved," he said.

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