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Good Morning Tom Hollander and Olivia Colman have returned to our screens in 鈥淩ev鈥. Hot on the heels of a recent report that the happiest workers in Britain are vicars. I remember spending a day with a journalist in and around Liverpool showing her some of the work our churches were doing. After touring a tough parish in Huyton with a young talented priest she turned to me in the car and said, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e just showing me the best ones.鈥 鈥淲ell鈥, I said, holding my breath, 鈥淎t any stage you can say 鈥榮top the car鈥 and I鈥榣l take you to the nearest vicarage.鈥 She didn鈥檛, and we ended up in Everton hearing all the stories that make episodes of Rev such riveting viewing. As the journalist left, the vicar shouted after her, 鈥淚t鈥檚 the best job in the world!鈥 Well, apparently in 21st Century Britain it is. Happiness and well-being are again rising to the top of the public agenda with the recent launch of a new Commission into Well-being and Public Policy by the Legatum Institute. It鈥檚 chaired by Lord O鈥橠onnell previously Cabinet Secretary. They鈥檒l be looking into how you can measure wellbeing and integrate it into public policy. Speaking at the launch Lord O鈥橠onnell said that in the past we鈥檝e relied too much on GDP as the measure of our success. In other words, those who believe, 鈥淚t鈥檚 the economy, stupid!鈥 need to move over and make way for other ambitions. From Aristotle to the Dalai Lama happiness is seen as the goal of life, so why shouldn鈥檛 it be the aim of politics and business too? A hundred years ago in 1914 John Spedan Lewis laid the foundations for a business where the first principle would be the happiness of all its partners. The classical Greeks had a word for it 鈥楨udemonia鈥 and the Jews called it 鈥楽halom鈥. Jesus prescribed for it with the Beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mount. And one of our greatest scientists said, 鈥淎 table, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin; what else does a man need to be happy?鈥 Although that might sound like one of the misfits from the cast of Rev, it was in fact from the brain of Albert Einstein! Today the Church of England in its calendar of holy people celebrates one of its most famous vicars, John Donne, Priest and Poet. He wrote about love but in one memorable line tilted at happiness with the words: 鈥淏e thine own palace, or the world鈥檚 thy jail.鈥
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