Showing posts with label King Charled III. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King Charled III. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2026

Exclusive: Bishop’s Letter to the King Sends Shockwaves through Palace

Mar 23, 2026 | A bishop has gone viral after issuing a powerful public plea to King Charles III, warning of the “erosion of Britain’s Christian inheritance” and urging the monarch to take action.

In a bold open letter, Bishop Ceirion H Dewar FSHC declares he “cannot remain silent while the Christian foundations of this kingdom are steadily dismantled.” The message has clearly struck a nerve—gaining over 3,500 signatures of support. …



The “Dark Age” of which I wrote so many years ago is clearly “Dawning” if, indeed, it hasn’t already dawned!

Our King has two options: Be Defender of the Faith, or choose to be ‘Defender of Faith’ as he seems to prefer. If he chooses the latter option, this country will not remain a Christian country for much longer. As I stated in my book twenty-five or so years ago, the weakening of Christianity in this country will create a vacuum which Islam will be only too willing to fill.

I am in no way “Islamophobic”. Not at all, in fact. On the contrary, there is much about Islam which I admire. But there is also much that I do not. Furthermore, I do not want my country to be Islamized. I have no objection to Muslims living amongst us. But they, as all other immigrants, must live by our laws, only and always! Just as I had to do in the years I lived in the Middle East. When I lived and worked there, I lived according to their laws, and willingly so. I expect the same courtesy from immigrants and people who are not indigenous to these islands.

We need strong leaders and governance to enforce these laws and regulations.

The way I suggest is the only way forward as far as I can see for a peaceful co-existence, or what is called Convivencia when talking of Christians, Jews, and Muslims living together in peaceful co-existence in Moorish Spain. Convivencia — a term coined by the Spanish historian Américo Castro in 1948. — © Mark Alexander