Cardinal O'Brien challenges pro-abortion Catholics
You always know where you stand with , the outspoken leader of Scotland's Catholics. Maybe that's because he was born and raised in Northern Ireland (and he was born on St Patrick's Day, no less). Now he has suggested that any Catholic politician supporting abotion laws should reconsider their position before receiving communion, and he is encouraging Catholic voters to reject pro-choice candidates. This in Scottish politics, which has been interpreted as a "threat" by some commentators, was delivered today in Edinburgh marking the 40th anniversary of the Abortion Act. Money quote:
In making this call, I speak most especially to those who claim to be Catholic. I ask them to examine their consciences and discern if they are playing any part in sustaining this social evil. I remind them to avoid cooperating in the unspeakable crime of abortion and the barrier such cooperation erects to receiving Holy Communion. As St. Paul warns us “whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of sinning against the body and blood of the Lord. A man ought to examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks of the cup. I would be failing as a pastor not to highlight the gravity of this situation not just to law makers but to anyone: mother; father; boyfriend; counsellor who in any way leads a mother to abortion.
Some in the media have interpreted the cardinal's comments as an indication that he will excommunicate any politician who supports abortion. This is not so. The cardinal is merely restating the canon law position as it faces Catholic legislators. Under , procuring an abortion brings with it "automatic (latae sententiae) excommunication" (Canon 1398). The offense of "being a conspiring or necessary accomplice" in an abortion may be taken to include those legislators who vote for abortion rights (and many others, as the cardinal notes). In this sense, a Catholic politician supporting abortion is already in effect excommunicated -- they have excommunicated themselves -- even if that person continues to receive bread at communion.
The real question now facing Cardinal O'Brien is whether he is prepared to follow through and instruct his priests to deny communion, in practice, to any Catholic politician who is known to support abortion rights.

and was minced then cooked with apple, onion and seasoning. The diner was the performance artist who is a committed vegetarian. He ate the corgi on live radio as a protest stunt to raise awareness of animal issues and to challenge the alleged unwillingness of the RSPCA to question the Duke of Edinburgh's treatment of animals.
Plainly, it's not only churches who have to deal with homophobia. has that he is "repulsed" by gays and lesbians and believes homosexuality is "wrong". If Mr Paisley is replused, it won't come as any surprise to anyone. In 2005, he was formally censured by the Northern Ireland Policing Board for "homophobic" comments (he described same-sex relationships as "immoral, offensive and obnoxious").
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On today's 
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Richard Turnbull, the embattled principal of the Anglican evangelical training school , is in the news again. Stephen Bates has a piece in under the headline "Theologian damns most Britons to hell". He reports comments from Dr Turnbull's speech given last October to the annual conference of Reform, a conservative evangelical pressure group within the Church of England. A video of that speech is available . Money quote:
The debate doesn't get much bigger than this: the future of our planet. This week's edition of Sunday Sequence comes live from the all-Ireland on Climate Change here at the in Mullaghbane, County Armagh.
A few days ago, I published a copy of the
If you were listening to Radio 4 this morning, you'd have heard a very powerful documentary on , presented by Olivia O'Leary and produced in Northern Ireland by Ophelia Byrne (who is the project manager for our Blueprint natural history series). The programme includes some extremely haunting stories from women who have experienced the dark side of this theological concept. If you missed it, you listen again
One of the most influential figures in American political and religious life, He was 73.
Meet Shambo, the six-year-old Friesian bull, who is part of a herd kept by the Skandavale Temple in Llanpumsaint, Carmarthen, in south west Wales, and recently . The monks have kept their sacred bull away from other animals, but the government vets are adamant that it is impossible to guarantee bio-security since
A picture of the Archbishop Peter Akinola, the Anglican primate of Nigeria, and Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, taken in happier of times. Peter Akinola's decision and go ahead with the installation of Martyn Minns as "Missionary Bishop" of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America (“CANA”) is tantamount to a declaration of independence. Akinola has described The Episcopal Church as a "cancerous rump" and he ragards this recent action as emergency surgery.
John Sweeney's Panorama film "Scientology And Me", to be screened on Monday at 8.30pm, on ѿý1, is explosive television.
and 27 June is the departure date. are already lining up to give their verdict. After an unpopular war in Iraq, the public's also divided about his legacy: he's Saint Tony to some; Tony B-Liar to others. But when the dust settles and we gain some historical perspective, how will we look back on the Blair years? For what it's worth, I've a feeling that history will be kind to Tony Blair.
Another day, another moment of history. Ian Paisley was
It's taken to get to this moment, but was perhaps the most significant day in the entire political history of Northern Ireland. We now have a power-sharing government that is.
I was very saddened tonight to learn that has . He was only 45 years old and had been ill for a short time.
He created a political sensation in United States three years ago when he of New Jersey and revealed at a press conference that he is a "gay American". Now Jim McGreevey is planning to be .
The front page of this week's is given over to a debate about whether Anglicans are "Protestants". There's even an snappily titled "No Anglican Papacy". It's a curious focus for the Gazette on the Sunday before Devolution in Northern Ireland. Our programme's main feature this Sunday considered the future relationship between faith groups and the new Assembly; whether Ian Paisley's role as First Minister was inconsistent with his role as Moderator of the Free Presbyterian Church; whether our new government should develop the kind of "structured dialogue" with faith groups we've seen in the Republic; and whether we needed a "Faith Tzar" in Northern Ireland.
Politicians are often asked, particularly during election campaigns, to name their favourite book. Their answers are then picked over for clues to their personalities -- and their obsessions. You can imagine election stategists debating which book they should claim is the favoured choice of their candidate. Then there's the danger that a reporter might ask the candidate what he or she particularly likes about the book that apparently set them off on a journey of public service. To avoid the fumblingly incomprehensible answer candidates may have to give at this moment, a good strategist will have given them talking points that read like a GCSE English cheat-sheet. The bigger danger, of course, is to allow the candidate to busk both answers.
The Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival could not have had a better . Two thousand people leapt to their feet the second Duke Special's set ended. We'd already been treated to an absolutely stunning performance from and the extraordinarily inventive (if you've ever wondered what would happen if you fused the music of Kate Bush and Björk, you need wonder no longer) .
After and 500 murders -- including an estimated 20 killings since its "ceasefire" 13 years ago -- the has announced that . From midnight tonight, the Loyalist paramilitary group "will assume a non-military, civilianised role".
She is a 17 year-old pregnant woman -- a citizen of the Irish Republic -- and has been told that the child she is carrying . Should she be premitted to leave Ireland, where abortion is illegal, to have her pregnancy terminated in Britain?
Guest blogger Neil Glover writes from Scotland.