There’s something rotten
in the state of England, and I hope it’s not a picture of what is to come
here in America.
It’s a serious loss of religious
freedom for Christians, even to the point where there’s a serious loss
of freedom of speech.
The latest incident was
just reported this week. A complaint has been filed against a medical doctor,
Richard Scott, with a 28-year unblemished track record.
After a long consultation
with a 24-year-old patient who was discouraged and “in a rut,” the doctor
asked if he had ever considered turning his problems over to Jesus.
In an article titled, “Prescribing
Jesus Gets Doctor Censured.” The London Sunday Times quotes the
doctor: "I only discussed mutual faith after obtaining the patient's permission.
In our conversation, I said that, personally, I had found having faith
in Jesus helped me and could help the patient. At no time did the patient
indicate that they were offended, or that they wanted to stop the discussion.
If that had been the case, I would have immediately ended the conversation.”
But later when the patient’s
mother asked how it went, the young man reportedly answered, "He just said
I need Jesus."
So the mother made an official
complaint, and now Dr. Scott is in trouble.
An irony of this case is
that Dr. Scott is a part of a consortium of six doctors, and their center
is explicitly religious. Even its name, Bethesda, is derived from the Bible.
So patients know this up front.
Furthermore, the patient
continues to seek treatment there, despite his mother’s grievance
against the physician.
Dr. Scott has decided to
fight this complaint because if he doesn’t, he fears some little off-hand
comment in the future might get him fired. He recognizes this as part of
an ongoing trend in favor of political correctness and against traditional
religion.
I was in England two years
ago and was shocked by what I learned in some of the interviews I conducted
of leading attorneys fighting for religious rights in that country.
Although Anglicanism is
the State Church of England, it is as if Atheism is the real state church.
I met with one London man
who lost his job as a homeless counselor when he mentioned faith briefly
with a woman who had severe health issues that were dominating her life.
I learned of two Christian
teenage girls who got in trouble in their school just outside of London
for not bowing down and worshiping Allah during a public assembly, although
their school was the equivalent of a public school here.
Then there is the part-time
teacher in Devon, who sent a private email from her computer at home to
her friends at church requesting prayer because her 5-year old daughter
got in trouble for talking with friends at school about religion. Somehow
the private e-mail request ended up in the hands of the head teacher, who
was using it to punish the mother.
In England, I spent some
time with Andrea Minichiello Williams and with Paul Diamond. Both are attorneys
(well, barristers), and the two co-founded the Christian Legal Centre to
fight this kind of anti-Christian bigotry. In fact, it looks like the medical
doctor’s attorney will be Paul Diamond in this case.
Diamond especially hates
to see the way the legal system has begun to single out Christians for
discrimination. He told me, “I’ve been doing these cases for twenty years,
and people used to have great respect for Christians. When I went to court,
if I had a Sunday-working case or a Christian minister case, the judge
was totally respectful.”
Now he said the legal environment
is hostile to a traditionally minded believer. Diamond told me just this
week in an email: “The Christian faith is seen as sectarian. In a recent
case, the Human Rights Commission described Christianity as akin to an
infection and the judges raised no objection to this argument. Christianity
is seen as sectarian, homophobic, anti-women. I go into court now and the
judges will be very hostile to the Christian.”
Andrea Williams warns, “America,
do not wait until you have a nurse who is suspended because she offered
prayer to a patient. Do not wait for the teacher who is suspended because
of his views on same-sex marriage. America, do not wait for a situation
when foster parents are unable to foster because they hold orthodox views
on Christian marriage.”
Andrea also notes, “What
is happening here in the United Kingdom is a picture of what could happen
in the United States. And that’s why it’s very vital that you look to us
and look to the stories that we’ve got going on here and see that these
things could come true there.”
Both Diamond and Williams
warn that what happens on that side of the pond often works its way over
here, if we’re not careful. That’s bad medicine we’re not quite ready for,
nor should we be.
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