MP says priest refused to give him communion after assisted dying vote | Politics | News


A Liberal Democrat MP has claimed he is now being refused Holy Communion by his local priest after voting for Kim Leadbeaterโ€™s Assisted Dying Bill. Chris Coghlan, the MP for Dorking and Horley, made the claim in a column for the Observer newspaper as he argues in favour of the legislation despite his own Christian faith.

Mr Coghlan claimed he had received a โ€œdisturbingโ€ email from his local priest four days before the vote warning him he would be considered โ€œan obstinate public sinnerโ€ should he support the legislation. The furious clergyman added he would be complicit in a โ€œmurderous act, which must always be forbidden and excludedโ€ and which is a “clear contravention of the Churchโ€™s teaching, which would leave me in the position of not being able to give you holy communion, as to do so would cause scandal in the Church.โ€ Mr Coghlan is himself a Roman Catholic, but insists he was elected as a Liberal Democrat MP, not a religious MP.

The Dorking MP also says the priestโ€™s furious email was especially worrying as he is responsible for signing off his childrenโ€™s education forms for the local Catholic school they both attend.

He pressed ahead and voted for Kim Leadbeaterโ€™s bill last Friday, leading to the priest โ€œpublicly announced at mass that he was indeed denying me holy communion as I had breached canon law.โ€

However he received messages of support from constituents, including a religious couple who wrote to tell him: โ€œOur faith and our belief in our Church community is based on Jesus Christ and the truth within scripture showing love and compassion.โ€

While the backbench bill passed on Friday and will now make its way to the House of Lords, Mr Coghlan notes that the majority was slashed from the first voteโ€™s 55 to the third reading of just 23.

He says he hopes this was โ€œnot as a result of MPs succumbing to the completely inappropriate interference in democracy by religious authorities that I experienced.โ€

According to the Campaign for Dignity in Dying, 69% of people who follow a religion in England and Wales say they would support assisted dying becoming a legal option for the terminally ill.

Lord Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, said: โ€œIt is no surprise to me that large numbers of Christians would support a compassionate assisted dying law in this country. One of the key themes of the Gospels is love for our fellow human beings.โ€

โ€œDoing whatever we can to relieve needless suffering and bring peace is a profoundly Christian act.

โ€œIt is my greatest hope that, after many years of delay, lawmakers will now finally grasp this issue and craft a new settlement for dying people that provides the compassion and kindness that so many in this country would like to see.โ€

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