Tony Blair’s Christian Faith

Filed under: Current Events — Barry Carey at 5:20 pm on Monday, June 2, 2008

So, what is Tony Blair up to since leaving his position as Prime Minister of Great Britain? A recent article in Time, Tony Blair’s Leap of Faith, provides some details. It appears he has dedicated the rest of his life to promoting the importance of religious belief in society and encouraging those of different faiths to work together to achieve common goals. The article explains:

“Faith is part of our future,” Blair says, “and faith and the values it brings with it are an essential part of making globalization work.” For Blair, the goal is to rescue faith from the twin challenges of irrelevance—the idea that religion is no more than an interesting aspect of history—and extremism. Blair and those working with him think religion is key to the global agenda. “You can’t hope to understand what’s happening in the world if you don’t know that religion is a very important force in people’s lives,” says Ruth Turner, 37, formerly a top aide to Blair in 10 Downing Street, who will head the foundation. “You can’t make the world work properly unless you understand that, while not everyone will believe in God or have a spiritual life, a lot of people will.” Blair, she says, has been thinking about these issues “for decades and decades and decades.” Over time, says Blair of the foundation’s work, “this is how I want to spend the rest of my life.”

Michael Elliott’s article treats Blair’s Christian faith with respect and reveals just how deep his commitment to that faith is. (Blair converted to Catholicism from Anglicanism seveal months ago.) He has recently launched the Tony Blair Faith Foundation in order:

… to promote respect and understanding between the major religions;
… to make the case for faith as a force for good;
… and to encourage inter-faith initiatives to tackle global poverty and conflict.

In his speech given to launch the foundation he explained that his efforts will extend to the six leading faiths (Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh and Jewish) to, among other things, mobilize against such world problems as Malaria.

Time goes on in explaining Blair’s faith, which he rediscovered as Oxford as a student in the 1970’s:

Blair is deeply religious—the most openly devout political leader of Britain since William Ewart Gladstone more than 100 years ago. He handles questions about religion deftly. He doesn’t back down. His longtime press secretary and consigliere, Alastair Campbell, remembers Blair in 1996 at a school in Scotland where a gunman had killed 16 children and a teacher. In a bloodstained classroom, Campbell asked Blair, “What does your God make of this?” Blair, says Campbell, stopped and replied, “Just because man is bad, it does not mean that God is not good.” There was, says Campbell, a force, a sense of conviction in Blair.

There is much good in the article, and I’ll close with one last quote about Blair:

He is convinced, he told me, that in the rich world, “without spiritual values, there is an emptiness that cannot be filled by material goods and wealth.” He understands that faith is what gives meaning to the lives of billions, and he passionately believes that the world would be a better place if people of faith harnessed their talents together in aid of the common good.

1 Comment »

Comment by Rick Juszkiewicz

August 3, 2008 @ 12:41 pm

Our short life in this world cannot compare to eternal life promised by God in His Word, the bible.
Our chief concern should be for the souls of the human race. Being a good and faithful servant of our Lord Jesus Christ could involve spreading the saving knowledge of His Word. Only Jesus can change a person’s heart or nature. That relationship with God is both our only hope for eternal life and for the freedom of a giving, unselfish, nature that can improve this world. God will provide for the needs of those who first seek His Truth and His kingdom of heaven. Religions can be an obstacle between that simple relationship of God and man.

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