Graham Tomlin

Graham Tomlin is a former Bishop of Kensington, and Director of the Centre for Cultural Witness

Why religion matters in the assisted dying debate

From our UK edition

Some time ago, I found myself sitting at a dinner opposite a Labour peer. We chatted over various things as the evening proceeded. Just before we were getting up to leave a new topic came up. “I am a convinced campaigner for assisted dying,” she said. “As a bishop, I suspect you're not. Why don’t you think we should do it?” Put on the spot, struggling to know what to say, and knowing I probably had one line to deliver as we stood up to leave, I said something like this: “Life is a gift from God. It's not up to us to decide when it ends.” She looked across at me with a pitying look and walked away, clearly unconvinced. Christian faith still has something deeper to bring to this debate I’ve often wondered what I should have said.

Why isn’t the Tory party helping desperate leaseholders?

From our UK edition

Marwa al-Sabouni is a Syrian architect who watched her home city of Homs destroyed during the Syrian conflict between 2011 and 2014. Out of that experience, she penned an  intensely moving and haunting account of what the idea of home means. She writes of how the dwellings we live in are intimately connected with our own sense of self: ‘Our homes don't just contain our life earnings, they stand for what we are. To destroy one's home should be taken as an equal crime to destroying one's soul.’ It’s a statement that echoes the biblical vision of every person able to ‘live in safety, under their own vine and under their own fig tree.

Prince Philip and the myth of stoicism

From our UK edition

In all the coverage of Prince Philip’s death, one word in the tributes keeps grabbing my attention: stoicism. The Spectator wrote that 'Prince Philip epitomised a very British stoicism; the Times said 'the royal marriage was built on stoicism, the odd clash and a deep sense of understanding'. The New Yorker meanwhile claimed that 'with Prince Philip’s death has passed the Last Embers of British Stoicism.'  Prince Philip was of course Greek in origin, but it is a bit of a stretch to call him and her Majesty devotees of Stoicism, the philosophy of Zeno of Athens, Epictetus and Seneca.