LETTERS – Give thanks for Queen’s life

It is with deep sadness that we, your bishops, received the news that our Sovereign Lady, Queen Elizabeth died.
It is taking time to sink in that the monarch most of us have trusted and relied on all our lives has been promoted to glory.
For us as Christians she has fulfilled her role as Defender of the Faith, offering the most effective Christian witness in public life around the world through her Christmas broadcasts and in the manner of her life. She unashamedly lived her life in and for Christ our Lord.
To those who pray, we invite prayer and thanksgiving for one who gave her whole life, be it long or short, in our service because of her anointed vocation to serve God. It was that simple for her.
Latterly, as she has relied on a shepherd’s stick to remain mobile, we have seen clearly the one who has been a shepherd of nations for Jesus’s sake.
Others are better placed than us to extol her merits as the key figure of the unity of our constituent parts as the United Kingdom.
We can say with conviction and knowledge that Elizabeth II provided the moral compass which all public leadership should emulate, not only in the United Kingdom but throughout the other nations where she has been head of state and head of the Commonwealth.
We know how loved and respected she has been by the people of Greater Lincolnshire and particularly by those who had the huge privilege of meeting her personally in her visits to the county, most recently in 2012 during her Diamond Jubilee.
King Charles, as the Prince of Wales, addressed Queen Elizabeth in the celebration of her Platinum Jubilee and thanked Mummy for living up to her promise to serve her people for her whole life. We praise God for her 70 years on the throne and for the previous years of service as a princess in war and peace. We give thanks for her reunion with Prince Philip and all her departed loved ones.
It is also our duty and our joy to pray for Charles, our new King, and for Queen consort Camilla and all the Royal Family, as they take on fresh responsibilities. We pray for a grieving family, for the King and his loved ones, for children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
A reign has ended, and a new reign has begun.
We give thanks for one Sovereign and pray God’s blessing upon King Charles III. We must take time to mourn; but we say already, ‘God save the King’. We pray for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon our new monarch. Long may he reign over us.

The Rt Rev Stephen Conway, Acting Bishop of Lincoln, The Rt Rev Dr David Court, Bishop of Grimsby and The Rt Rev Dr Nicholas Chamberlain, Bishop of Grantham.

more >

Drones ‘have transformed’ policing in county

14 Nov 2024

Man appears in court charged with murder in Spalding street

14 Nov 2024

Gosberton man jailed for smacking young child

13 Nov 2024

Keep donations coming

13 Nov 2024

Extension of grant funding project welcomed

13 Nov 2024

Strikers urged to refuse offer

13 Nov 2024