“Where charity and love are, there God is.”
As observant Christians approach minority status, public figures might become more willing to highlight the plight of believers abroad.
I can just about imagine why a gay Parisian might just decide to send an unequivocal message to the Left at the next election.
Enshrining the doctrine of reasonable accommodation in the Bill would substantially improve the status quo.
A new report, and an event tomorrow, highlight the plight of people throughout the world persecuted for practising their faith – especially by extremist Islamist groups.
If Trump’s election damages America’s work in this area, then the UK must increase its own efforts
“This man received death threats and we have all looked the other way.”
The state is indirectly attacking an individual who has received death threats rather than take action against those threatening him.
Politicians have mostly failed to have the difficult but necessary discussion about what happens when one protected characteristic clashes with another.
The Conservative Human Rights Commission has reported, and a UN investigation by a special rapporteur is required.
At the heart of her speech was not so much a new interventionism as a Church-formed moralism, a sense of public service – and a Good Samaritan Moment.
Momentum’s momentum doesn’t need to fizz with punch: they’ve won already.
No foreign preacher who rejects religious freedom should be given permission to enter the UK.
Careers in the profession could be closed to people of faith if the General Pharmaceutical Council gets it way.