How can we put Britain back together?

Since our EU Referendum the whole country has been united in a way we have never seen before. We find ourselves bound together, in sheer disbelief. Whether you voted, REMAIN, BREXIT or NO-VOTE, you will be as surprised as the next person that … BREXIT is actually happening.

Since then the surprises keep coming — in seismic doses. The Prime Minister resigns. The leader of the opposition looks like he needs to resign. The pound reaches a 30 year low. The Scottish First Minister calls for Scotland’s independence and the leaders of major European countries tell us to …“get out, and be quick about it!”… Or as a cartoon in one of our newspapers said “Aliens didn’t land on earth and we didn’t find Elvis – but everything else happened”.

Not bad for a week’s work.

Cameron Resigns

The leadership issues will settle – maybe in ways we haven’t seen before, but they will settle. The important question then is not so much what will our leaders do – that is largely out of our hands — but what will you do? How do ordinary folk like you and I engage constructively in the politics we see unfolding?

But hold on …

Christianity isn’t “political” is it?

One morning in college, our tutor asked us to think about a question over coffee: “Was Jesus political? Come back with an answer”, he said with a smile.

Not so easy! The question comes up now and then and is answered in different ways.

The best answer I have heard is that Jesus wasn’t party-political — he would never have voted Tory, Labour, LibDem, SNP … BREXIT or REMAIN. But he was HIGHLY political in every other sense. He was one of the most political figures ever to walk the earth. Political in his stand against unjust authorities. Political in his vision for a new order. Political in his undermining of accepted social practices, and he was especially political in his scathing critique of hypocrisy whether that hypocrisy came from the religious elite, or, in case we think we are in the clear, from ordinary individuals.

We don’t have a choice about whether we are involved in the “politics” or not. As Christians it’s our job to not only be involved but in doing so to scatter some salt, to shed some light.

But how …

Is there some new narrative that can help us?

We are starting to realise that EU laws and procedures have shaped our country in fundamental ways that now need to be untangled and re-cast in the form of UK laws. As we go back to the drawing board we will find that ideas and policies which have been held in check by EU law for decades, and to which we have all become accustomed, suddenly come up for discussion. The way we pay taxes, the manner in which we view immigrants, the way we share wealth across classes of society, and which areas of our country require special assistance and which do not, are just a few of the sensitive topics which will be thrown open in a short window of time.

As well as prayer and unity, which many have sensibly called for, there are a couple of things to keep foremost in our minds.

We must be alert to extremism in all its forms and coming from any direction, left, right or religious, in whatever reasonable clothes it turns up in. It is unacceptable. The problem with extremist views is that, sometimes, we don’t know we’ve got them, because suddenly “it seems so reasonable”. As soon as it’s it’s my hospital, my kids’ education, my taxes, people moving into my town, the rubber hits the road. We will be tested in new ways.

And we need to reach out to understand the people we don’t understand. The referendum revealed deep divisions between old and young, city and suburb, and disturbingly between haves and have-nots. If I don’t understand people’s reasons for not agreeing with me, mine can only be a negative voice.

Who is your neighbour?

Everything changes – everything stays the same

Of course this isn’t new. It’s the narrative we should be living by anyway. Many of us just a few weeks ago (though it seems a lot longer) celebrated the Queen’s 90th birthday. We sang and spoke of the Queen’s steadfast faith, and of God’s unending grace, his unchanging nature, his faithfulness through the years. None of that has changed. It was just easier back then because our world looked settled, unchangeable.

Living the Christian life is mostly straightforward for most of us living in the affluent west because the stakes are low. When changes of this magnitude come we can feel shaken-up. But that can also bring us new opportunities. Let’s pray that with this shaking-up comes a waking-up to things we have stopped thinking about, or caring about.

This articlewas also published by The Baptist Times and Premier Christianity

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[…] Versions of this article were also published by Premier Christianity and The Baptist Times. If you enjoyed reading this, try this previous post How Can We Put Britain Back Together? […]

Jeff Dickey
7 years ago

If I don’t understand people’s reasons for not agreeing with me, mine can only be a negative voice.

This is so foundational. So many of us get caught in the crossfire with “trolls”, “troublemakers”, people we do not understand…and we just keep shouting the same slogans, a bit louder and more insistently as though that will make them “see reason”. Some online fora are more prone to that sort of shouting match than others but, in all cases, it’s we who chose to do the shouting — or not.

Thank you.

Sunil Raheja
7 years ago

Thank you for a balanced article Chris. The challenge as I see it is for there to be genuine dialogue and debate without going into extremes of abuse and exaggeration. We should not be surprised that there are evil forces out there seeking to exploit people’s fears and prejudices for personal gain. We cannot take our freedom and democracy for granted.

Aman @ USA
Aman @ USA
7 years ago

Very well written and thank you for sharing Chris.
Only time will tell how this event shaped Britain’s future. But it sure is a wake up call to its citizens and the world — as you say — to stay alert to extremism & understand others. I would another one, for all who did not vote ‘to go out and vote’ and for those who did vote to ‘vote consciously’. I wonder if another referendum is held, how different the results would be?

Paul Hobson
Paul Hobson
7 years ago

A clear headed piece in confusing times. Am sure this will help people in their processing of what’s happened in the last few days.

Dylan
Dylan
7 years ago

Chris – my thoughts on the vote and Haves V Have-Nots etc: We may not see it from our comfortable suburbia, but if we lived in a terrace in the North East we’d see how having little and seeming to have less because of immigration can generate fear and antagonism which manifests itself in racism. (for example). Not everyone has the good luck to be reading the Guardian over morning coffee in an area where refugee families will never be rubbing shoulders. Whereas if you’re jostling for a place in the doctors next to someone who doesn’t speak your language… Read more »