Christians question Westminster Declaration

Christian groups have called into question a declaration urging Christians to vote according to their conscience in the General Election.

The Westminster Declaration urges Christians to vote with three issues particularly in mind - protecting human life, protecting marriage, and protecting freedom of conscience.

It has been signed by more than 36,000 Christians, including former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey, the head of the Evangelical Alliance Steve Clifford, and the head of the Catholic Church in Scotland Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

The declaration has met with strong criticism from Faithworks, which has stated it will not be signing it.

The influential ministry, which resources Christians for community engagement, criticised the Westminster Declaration for suggesting that “government should be chosen according to their responses to only three issues – protection of human life, marriage and conscience – rather than the impact of the spectrum of their policies locally, nationally and internationally”.

According to The Church of England Newspaper, the group said: “The Westminster 2010 Declaration sets Christians up on a moral high ground and implicitly creates divisiveness. It does this at just the time when the church’s morality has been called into question across the world.”

Senior representatives of the three main parties will be asked to sign the Westminster 2010 pledge, distinct from the declaration, at a major hustings event in Westminster on Monday. The pledge asks that parliamentary candidates “respect, uphold and protect the right of Christians to hold and express Christian beliefs and act according to Christian conscience”.

Cross-party group, Christians in Politics, also expressed its concerns about the declaration. It said that while there was “much to commend” about Westminster 2010, it added that there was “much to question about its timing, depth and tone”.

“It has also been inevitably hampered by the lack of consultation with Christian Parliamentarians and the main Christian groups involved in praying and serving with our political infrastructure,” it continued.

“There is also a danger that people will judge the faith of a Christian standing for election, merely by whether or not they have signed this pledge. We urge people not to do so.”

Faithworks is encouraging supporters to sign its own Faithworks Declaration, asking that the next Government take steps to ensure that faith-based groups are supported rather than treated with suspicion or discrimination.

The declarations have been issued as Christian groups seek to mobilise the churchgoing portion of the electorate to engage with the General Election.

CARE (Christian Action Research Education) said the number of church hustings events registered on its election website had exceeded all expectations.

Nola Leach, CARE’s chief executive, said: "When we set out we hoped we might get 50, never expecting that two weeks into the campaign we would have over 200!

"We continue to be unaware of any larger single source of hustings. It’s wonderful to see the church playing such a strategic role during this election."
News
Scotland’s assisted suicide vote: a temporary victory?
Scotland’s assisted suicide vote: a temporary victory?

It will be interesting to see if the Scottish government goes down the route of investing in quality palliative care, or whether Liam McArthur's defeated assisted suicide bill is simply resurrected in another form.

Nick Timothy stands by criticism of Muslim prayer in Trafalgar Square
Nick Timothy stands by criticism of Muslim prayer in Trafalgar Square

Shadow justice minister Nick Timothy is standing by claims that a mass Islamic prayer in Trafalgar Square was “a declaration of domination” that should never be repeated.

Britain’s culture of giving is becoming more 'fragile' as donations fall
Britain’s culture of giving is becoming more 'fragile' as donations fall

A major new report from the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) has raised fresh concerns about the state of charitable giving in the UK, showing that total public donations fell sharply in 2025 as fewer people gave and average gifts became smaller.

UK urged to press Nigeria on violence against Christians during historic Tinubu visit
UK urged to press Nigeria on violence against Christians during historic Tinubu visit

A coalition of Christian and human rights organisations has called on the UK government to use President Bola Tinubu’s state visit to Britain to press for stronger protections for Christians and other vulnerable communities in Nigeria, amid continuing concern over deadly attacks and weak accountability.