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The Bishops' Conference of Scotland

2nd March 2026


2 March 2026

Christian Leaders Urge MSPs to Reject Assisted Suicide Bill Ahead of Final Vote

An Open Letter to MSPs Ahead of the Stage 3 Vote on the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill

Dear Member of the Scottish Parliament,

We write together as Christian leaders in Scotland because we believe Liam McArthur's Assisted Dying bill touches one of the most important moral questions of our time - how we care for one another at the end of life.

While we understand the deeply felt desire to relieve suffering, permitting doctors to assist in ending life undermines human dignity. However carefully framed, such legislation risks normalising he idea that some lives are no longer worth living. It would expose the most vulnerable - the elderly, the disabled, and those who feel themselves to be a burden - to subtle pressures and coercion that no safeguard can fully prevent.

True compassion does not mean helping someone to die, but committing ourselves to care for them in life. Scotland should invest in first-class palliative and end-of-life care, ensuring that no one faces pain, fear, or loneliness without support.

Courts and legislatures in Canada and Australia have grappled with the consequences of assisted dying laws: eligibility has expanded, safeguards have been challenged, and concerns about coercion and misuse have arisen. We should learn from those experiences rather than repeat their mistakes.

We urge you, therefore, to stand for the equal worth and dignity of every human life, and to vote against this legislation at Stage 3. A truly compassionate society accompanies those who suffer; it does not abandon them to an early death.

Yours sincerely,

Rt Rev. Rosemary Frew
Moderator, Church of Scotland

Bishop John Keenan
President of the Bishops' Conference of Scotland

Rev Alasdair Macleod
Moderator, Free Church of Scotland

Rev Martin Keane, Moderator
United Free Church of Scotland

Major David Burns
Executive Secretary to Leadership (Scotland), Salvation Army 

Andy Hunter
Director for Scotland, Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches

Alistair Matheson
Scottish Regional Superintendent for the Apostolic Church UK


Contact:

Media Office

Bishopsโ€™ Conference of Scotland
64 Aitken Street, ML6 6LT
Tel: 01236 764061
Email: [email protected]

27th February 2026


27 February 2026

Choosing Compassion, Not Assisted Suicide - A Pastoral Letter from the Catholic Bishops of Scotland

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

Scotland stands at a moment of profound moral consequence. In the coming weeks, the Scottish Parliament will cast its final vote on the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill; legislation that would, for the first time in our nationโ€™s history, permit physician-assisted suicide. As your shepherds, entrusted with the care of souls and the protection of human dignity, we write to you with deep concern.

True compassion is not found in hastening death but in walking with those who suffer, ensuring they receive the medical, emotional, and spiritual care that affirms their inherent worth. Every personโ€”regardless of age, illness, disability, or circumstanceโ€”is a gift from God. There is no such thing as a life without value. Our task as a society is not to eliminate suffering by eliminating the sufferer, but to surround every individual with love, support, and dignity until their natural end.

Over recent months, several Members of the Scottish Parliament who once supported the proposal have now either withdrawn, or are seriously considering withdrawing, their backing, recognising that the risks embedded within it are too grave to ignore. Their change of heart reflects a dawning awareness that coercion, especially the subtle, hidden coercion experienced by the most vulnerable, including the elderly, the sick, the disabled and those living with domestic abuse, cannot be reliably detected, let alone prevented.

Key protections that should form the very foundation of such legislation, however flawed the principle may be, have been removed or rejected. Proposals for mandatory training for doctors to recognise coercive control were voted down by the Parliament Health and Social Care Committee. Measures ensuring that patients are offered proper palliative and social care before considering assisted suicide were dismissed. An opt-out for hospices and care homes who object to assisted suicide was also rejected. Even the conscience rights of healthcare workers remain uncertain. As a result, MSPs are being asked to vote on a Bill that is incomplete and reliant on future intervention from Westminsterโ€”an arrangement that several parliamentarians have already described as unworkable and irresponsible.

Experience from abroad also offers a sober warning. In countries where assisted suicide has been introduced, narrow criteria have widened over time, placing ever more people at riskโ€”not because of unbearable physical suffering, but because they feel abandoned, isolated, or burdensome. We must not allow such a trajectory to take root here in Scotland.

We therefore urge you, the Catholic faithful of Scotland, to act. Please contact your MSPs and respectfully ask them to oppose this legislation. Make your voice heard in defence of those who may not be able to speak for themselves. Resources to assist youโ€”including Care Not Killingโ€™s online email toolโ€”are available and we invite you to use them prayerfully and thoughtfully.

Let us also hold in prayer all those approaching the end of life, all who care for them, and all charged with shaping the laws of our land. May the Holy Spirit grant our nation the wisdom to choose the path of life, compassion, and genuine human solidarity.

Yours devotedly in Christ,
+ John Keenan, President, Bishop of Paisley
+ Brian McGee, Vice-President, Bishop of Argyll and the Isles
+ Andrew McKenzie, Episcopal Secretary, Bishop of Dunkeld
+ Leo Cushley, Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh
+ William Nolan, Archbishop of Glasgow
+ Joseph Toal, Bishop of Motherwell
+ Hugh Gilbert, Bishop of Aberdeen
+ Francis Dougan, Bishop of Galloway

Contact:
Media Office

Bishopsโ€™ Conference of Scotland
64 Aitken Street, ML6 6LT
Tel: 01236 764061
Email: [email protected]

The Roman Catholic Bishops in Scotland work together to undertake nationwide initiatives through their Commissions and Agencies.

The members of the Bishops' Conference are the Bishops of the eight Scottish Dioceses. Where appropriate the Bishops Emeriti (retired) provide a much welcomed contribution to the work of the conference. The Bishops' Conference of Scotland is a permanently constituted assembly which meets regularly throughout the year to address relevant business matters.

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The Jubilee Prayer

Father in heaven,
may the faith you have given us
in your son, Jesus Christ, our brother,
and the flame of charity enkindled in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, reawaken in us the blessed hope for the coming of your Kingdom.

May your grace transform us into tireless cultivators of the seeds of the Gospel.
May those seeds transform from within both humanity and the whole cosmos in the sure expectation of a new heaven and a new earth,
when, with the powers of Evil vanquished,
your glory will shine eternally.

May the grace of the Jubilee reawaken in us, Pilgrims of Hope, a yearning for the treasures of heaven. May that same grace spread the joy and peace of our Redeemer throughout the earth. 

To you our God, eternally blessed, be glory and praise for ever.

Amen

News from the Commissions and Agencies

April 2025



**๐—จ๐—ฃ๐—–๐—ข๐— ๐—œ๐—ก๐—š ๐—˜๐—ฉ๐—˜๐—ก๐—ง๐—ฆ ๐—”๐—ง ๐—–๐—”๐—ฅ๐—™๐—œ๐—ก ๐—Ÿ๐—ข๐—จ๐—ฅ๐——๐—˜๐—ฆ ๐—š๐—ฅ๐—ข๐—ง๐—ง๐—ข**
๐˜๐˜ถ๐˜ณ๐˜ต๐˜ฉ๐˜ฆ๐˜ณ ๐˜ฅ๐˜ฆ๐˜ต๐˜ข๐˜ช๐˜ญ๐˜ด ๐˜ข๐˜ฏ๐˜ฅ ๐˜ต๐˜ช๐˜ฎ๐˜ฆ๐˜ด ๐˜ต๐˜ฐ ๐˜ฃ๐˜ฆ ๐˜ข๐˜ฏ๐˜ฏ๐˜ฐ๐˜ถ๐˜ฏ๐˜ค๐˜ฆ๐˜ฅ ๐˜ด๐˜ฐ๐˜ฐ๐˜ฏ!
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Homily of Bishop Keenan President of BCOS at the chapel of Westminster St Maryโ€™s Undercroft
BCOS Visit to Westminster 2025
Dear Friends, it is good for us to gather here for Holy Mass in this fine Chapel of St Mary Undercroft as the heart and centre of our visit to Parliament and our Scottish parliamentarians and others.
Like much else caught up in history and human affairs this chapel, we know, has not been without its ups and downs. Initially conceived as the crypt of the former St Stephen's Chapel which once stood above, we are told it had latterly fallen on hard times, even doubling up as a wine cellar, a dining room for Speakers and perhaps the stables for Cromwell's horses. It took the fire of 1834 that destroyed St. Stephenโ€™s and much of the old building to restore it to its rightful use, although it hardly survived the conflagration and its scarred and burned-out stone must have made a severe, if not pitiable, sight.
At least, that is, until there came along the artist and architect Edward Middleton Barry. Surveying the sad remains of the chapel, with quite brilliant vision he imagined it as it could be and is now, adorned in its glory of fine decoration, gilded designs and rich colours from top to bottom, and all pointing to the backdrop of the altar depicting royal British saints.

Middleton Barryโ€™s story was one of โ€˜like father like son.โ€™ His father, Sir Charles Barry, was also an artist and architect with a reputable practice and, after his completing his initial formation, Middleton Barry joined his fatherโ€™s firm, going on to become a trusted and invaluable assistant to him. Upon his fatherโ€™s death, he then went on to complete many of his fatherโ€™s unfinished works, most notable among them in this very Palace of Westminster, ever sensitive to his fatherโ€™s vision and bringing to the light of day the plans of his fatherโ€™s drawing board.
Why do I dwell upon all of this? Well, I think it can lend a perspective to help us understand and contextualise the Scriptures and Gospel for today.

Firstly, we can think of it casting some light on the prophecy of Isaiah. This forty-ninth chapter comes from the section written up in the last moments of the Peopleโ€™s seventy-years of Babylonian exile when all must have seemed darkness descending to gloom, with the People of GOD long having hung up their harps on the willows there and all out of cheer, much like must have been this clapped out and burned-up little chapel when first seen by Middleton Barry.
Like him, the LORD inspired Isaiah with a vision of a rosier, even glorious, future for the People and how to get them from here to there. Isaiah manages to see the desert plain from Babylon to Sion not as a place of thirst, scorching wind and sun but a journey with grazing on every hilltop. In the middle of the Peopleโ€™s sadness Isaiah offers a vision of joy; in their anxiety and despair, one of consolation. In a period characterised as leaderless, he offers them the assurance of GODโ€™s love, as dependable as the care of a mother for her child. Nor is his message limited to his own People but is a vision for the whole world, for he foresees โ€˜some on their way from afar, others from the north and the westโ€™. The whole world will draw salvation from Isaiahโ€™s hope.
In the Gospel we learn of the intimate relationship between Jesus and this Father, an insight unparalleled in any other place in the Scriptures. Here Jesus reminds us that we cannot understand Him by regarding Him simply in His own terms. He makes sense only as His Fatherโ€™s Son, united with His Father in His will, power and function, in some sense just as Middleton Barry saw himself bringing to completion, according to his fatherโ€™s design and plan, this chapel and Palace.

Jesus has the same will as His Father: I seek not to do my own will but the will of Him who sent meโ€™. โ€˜Whatever the Father does, the Son does too.โ€™ It is the Father who has power over life and judgement; the Father gives life, but, just as the Father gives life, so the Son gives life. Again, as the Father judges no one, Jesus will withhold condemnation on every soul in order to offer hope of salvation. Certainly, as Son He is equal in nature to His Father but, as Son, will only will and act in ways derived from His Father.
Is there something in this for us as leaders, civic and religious? Perhaps a prayer in these dim and perturbed times to be leaders of vision, who are able to call our people out of darkness and help them to see how bare heights can be places of pasture and thirsty places springs of water: how to make roads in the mountains; how to draw all sorts of forsaken people in our collected humanity, from near and far, north and west, to the hope of a brighter future, of comfort, compassion and joy.

And then to find the humility not to look for self-glory but to see ourselves as heirs of a tradition passed down to us from our forefathers and forebears, who went on working for the freedoms, truths and values we have inherited in our time, and to look only to pass them on intact and enriched, as this Chapel, by our sincere effort, wise vision and humble service in our short time on earth.

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TOMORROW: Join us in Motherwell Diocese to hear recent stories from the Christian communities in Jerusalem and the West Bank from our Catholic Social Teaching Engagement Officer, Anne-Marie Clements, who has recently returned from the Holy Land accompanying Archbishop Nolan.

๐Ÿ—“๏ธTues 8th April
๐Ÿ•ข7.30pm
๐Ÿ“Diocesan Centre, Coursington Road
๐Ÿ”Share to spread the word

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