England today is in the midst of a liberal firestorm. Having allowed, for the past 20 years, Islam to multiply and flourish
within their borders, they now find themselves being crowded out of
their own country. Now to “seal the deal’, they are drawing up plans to
have the God of the bible kicked out of their courtrooms.
And what will God do about it? He will leave them to their own devices, as He does with ALL nations that reject Him and His holy word. You would have thought that England would have learned their lesson with Israel and the Balfour Declaration in WWI. Guess not.“The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.” Psalm 9:17From Daily Mail UK: Defendants and witnesses in
British courts will no longer swear on the Bible to tell the truth under
controversial plans being considered by a powerful body of judges.
This is the face of England today. Islam is in the ascension and has forever changed the landscape of Britain.
The traditional religious oath could be scrapped amid concerns that
many giving evidence in criminal cases no longer take it
seriously. Instead, all witnesses and defendants would promise to tell
the truth without mentioning God, and would acknowledge they could be
jailed if they are caught lying.
It is claimed the new oath would be fairer for everyone and make it
easier to understand the importance of what they are saying. But
critics point out non-believers already have the option of promising to
tell the truth without any reference to a sacred text, and that the
change would further erode Britain’s Christian heritage.
The historic change will be debated this month by the Magistrates’
Association, and if it is voted through the organisation’s influential
policy committee will draw up plans to be sent to the Ministry of
Justice.
The married 62-year-old was raised in the Jewish faith but now calls
himself an atheist. ‘I don’t intend my motion to make any comment on
religion,’ he said. ‘It is certainly not anti-religious.’ But
it has been seen by senior figures in the Church of England as another
attempt to chip away at the country’s Christian foundations.
The Rt Rev Michael Nazir-Ali, former Bishop of Rochester, said: ‘This
could be the slippery slope towards the increasing secularisation of
society. Where will it end – with the Coronation Oath? The Bible is
bound up with the constitution, institutions and history of this
country. It is right for people to have a choice of oath, a religious or
non-religious one. But we are being urged, in the name of tolerance and
secularisation, to restrict that choice.’The Rev Arun Arora, director of communications for the Church of
England, added: ‘Given that the last census showed almost 60 per cent of
respondents self-identified as Christians and two thirds as people of
faith, this proposal seems to ignore the statistical reality that we
remain a faithful nation. This kind of proposal seems driven more by
blinkered campaigning agendas than abiding interests in justice and
truth.’
John Glen, Tory MP for Salisbury and a magistrate until last year, said: ‘This smacks of political correctness gone mad.’ Legal expert Lord Carlile QC said: ‘It would be unacceptable for the choice to take a religious oath to be removed.’
Existing religious oaths have,
for hundreds of years, required Christian witnesses to hold the Bible
and state: ‘I swear by almighty God that I shall tell the truth, the
whole truth and nothing but the truth.’Followers of other faiths are given copies of their sacred texts with Muslims swearing on the Koran
and Jews on the Old Testament, for instance. Those who choose instead
to make an affirmation are required to ‘solemnly, sincerely and truly
declare and affirm’ the truth of their evidence.
Under Mr Abrahams’ proposal, the holy books would be removed and the
oath would read: ‘I promise very sincerely to tell the truth, the whole
truth and nothing but the truth and I understand that if I fail to do
so I will be committing an offence for which I will be punished and may
be sent to prison.’
The plan will be debated at the agm of the Magistrates’ Association,
representing 23,000 lay judges, in Cardiff on October 19. A MoJ
spokesman said: ‘We have no plans to change the arrangements for
swearing an oath or making an affirmation in court, which have worked
well for many years and still do.’
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