The Queen‘s Faith

June 5, 2022 at 7:46 am Leave a comment

The Queen’s faith has enabled her to be a constant strength and comfort of the nation

Stephen Cotrell in The Telegraph digitaleditions.telegraph.co.uk/data/990/reader/reader.html

Amid all the pomp, pageantry and pleasure the Platinum Jubilee brings, it is easy to forget that at its heart, the Coronation of 69 years ago was a religious event. And while television cameras may have been granted access to Westminster Abbey, one moment was hidden from public view. Her Majesty was anointed with oil and afforded a time of stillness and reflection before God. She was also given a Bible by the Archbishop of Canterbury and reminded that scripture is “the most valuable thing this world affords”.

Geoffrey Fisher was the archbishop at the time. He came alongside Her Majesty as she prepared for the spiritual journey that lay ahead. One of the treasures in the Lambeth Palace library is the book of devotions, which he presented to Her Majesty all those years ago. It includes prayers, passages of scripture and daily meditations.

For Her Majesty, the Coronation was an intimate encounter between a monarch and her God, a moment where the Queen would be called by name and given a lifelong vocation. It marked a moment where her personal relationship with Christ met the national events and public moments that remind us that this country, its laws and customs and culture, is shaped by the Christian faith.

The Queen’s Christmas addresses have long been a powerful and public example of this faith in our national life. They show how faith in Christ informs and sustains the values of duty, service, honour and sacrifice we so rightly commend this Jubilee.

It is the lens through which she has viewed the world.

Invoking the parable of the Good Samaritan in her Christmas address in 1989, she said: “Our neighbours are those of our friends, or complete strangers, who need a helping hand. Do you think they might also be some of the living species threatened by spoiled rivers, or some of the children in places like Ethiopia and Sudan who don’t have enough to eat?” And, referencing the same story in 1985, she concluded her address by saying that “the story of the Good Samaritan reminds us of our duty to our neighbour. We should try to follow Christ’s clear instruction at the end of that story: ‘Go and do thou likewise’.”

As Supreme Governor of the Church of England, when addressing General Synod the Queen has often spoken about the “ministry of reconciliation” to which Christians are called. She has lived that ministry out in a most remarkable way. In 2012, the Queen famously shook hands with Martin McGuinness, despite the long and painful history and her beloved uncle’s death at the hands of the IRA in 1979.

Entry filed under: Uncategorized.

Platinum Jubilee Concert Come Together

Leave a comment

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


EXTRA TIME - VERLÄNGERUNG:
Was nach der 90. Minute kommt, entscheidet über Sieg oder Niederlage.

EXTRA TIME - BESONDERE ZEIT:
"RAPIDHAMMER'S FOOTBALL DIARY" bringt Berichte und Gedanken zum Fußball
und zum Leben an sich.
June 2022
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930