The Sunday Telegraph reckons that the Pope will urge the Government "to protect religious freedoms to allow Christians to follow their beliefs" in his speech at Westminster Hall on Friday (see earlier post.). Inside, Ann Widdecombe backs this idea in an article praising Cardinal Newman: taking the example of the Catholic adoption agencies which were forced to close in 2007, she says "Newman was the first to recognise that the flip side of the coin stamped with the head of liberalism is intolerance and persecution". Mona Siddiqui, who is among those invited to receive Pope Benedict XVI at Holyrood House on Thursday, takes up the anti-secularist theme, criticising the "widely accepted and extolled narrative" that "democracies must be secular to flourish and that liberal states do not need religion to give them real moral purpose". It is nonsense, she says, to think that "religion does not matter and that people of faith need simply to tame their religious passions". Eamon Duffy also writes at length (see earlier post). In its editorial, the Sunday Telegraph thinks the papal visit "has the potential to become a showcase of the best in Christian life ... an example of devotion that can rekindle the spirit of faith and sacrifice in this country".
Meanwhile, the editor of The Tablet, Catherine Pepinster (photo), tells the newspaper she used to edit, The Independent on Sunday, that there's nothing strange about being both liberal and a Catholic.