24 April 2014, The Tablet

Clegg reveals his openness to faith


Nick Clegg has revealed that he is an agnostic who remains open to the possibility of adopting faith, not an atheist as he has widely been regarded up to now.

His remarks came as a public debate continued over whether Britain is a “Christian country”.

The Deputy Prime Minister has consistently been described as an “atheist” since being asked in 2007 by the BBC if he believed in God and replying: “No.” But talking to The Tablet at an Easter reception on Wednesday, Mr Clegg described himself as an agnostic and left the door open to believing in God.

“I’m much more of an agnostic because I don’t have anything against faith,” Mr Clegg said. “I have huge respect for and interest in theological issues. So I don’t come at this with stridently secular views … I have a great admiration for people who have a strong faith. It’s a wonderful thing to have, but it’s just not something I possess. Not at the moment. But it is not something I would close my heart or my mind to.”

David Cameron wrote in an article in the Church Times before Easter: “I believe we should be more confident about our status as a Christian country.” Following Mr Cameron’s remarks, 55 well-known secularists wrote to The Daily Telegraph accusing the Prime Minister of sowing “alienation and division” with his remarks.

This week Dominic Grieve, the Attorney General, said that although religious extremism discouraged some Christians from being open about their faith, Christianity was woven into the country’s fabric. “Many of the underlying ethics of society are Christian-based and the result of 1,500 years of Christian input into our national life. It is not going to disappear overnight,” he said.

Mr Clegg, whose wife, Miriam, is a practising Catholic, said that his own mother is a “devout Catholic” and that he attended Russian Orthodox services with his father’s mother as a child.

Cardinal Vincent Nichols has appealed for those debating immigration to avoid being “alarmist”, as a row broke out over
the UK Independence Party’s controversial election posters.


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