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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

Bishops’ 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 nation’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 person—regardless of age, illness, disability, or circumstance—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 Westminster—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 risk—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 you—including Care Not Killing’s online email tool—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

Bishops’ 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

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Hope by Pope Francis

Reviewer: Henry Mance

Financial Times 14 January 2025

There is nothing more fashionable than telling your own story. Not even the Pope can resist the temptation. So this month Pope Francis, the first Latin American and the first Jesuit to head the Catholic Church, goes where other pontiffs have not.

Hope: The Autobiography is billed as the “first memoir written by a sitting pope”. A cynic might joke that it’s not even the first memoir written by Francis: last year he published his recollections of world events, Life: My Story Through History.

But Francis is not interested in cynicism. His election in 2013 breathed new life into the church, replacing froideur with friendliness, a focus on sexual behaviour with an embrace of humility and the poor.

Conservative critics have swarmed but, even as a frail 88-year-old, Francis has remained defiantly progressive. Last week he appointed an opponent of Donald Trump’s migration policies as archbishop of Washington.

In his autobiography, Francis again breaks moulds. He may be the first memoirist ever to say he wants to lower his own reputation: “my strongest sentiment”, he writes, is that he has “a public esteem of which I am not worthy.” Hope is unusual in form, too: Francis uses childhood anecdotes almost as parables; the book often deviates into sermons.

The experience of growing up “respectably poor” in a multi-ethnic Buenos Aires neighbourhood, for example, bred in the then Jorge Mario Bergoglio a respect for Jews and Muslims. It familiarised him with the lives of prostitutes and prisoners. At times, the links are too cute — does playing as goalkeeper really prepare you for facing life’s problems? But at its best, Hope is elegant and joyful, its call for spiritual renewal a counterpoint to the more pervasive genre of self-help.

Love for migrants is a recurring theme. Hope begins by recounting how Francis’s grandparents and father nearly drowned fleeing from fascist Italy to Argentina: the boat on which they were due to travel sank, but they had been delayed. He draws parallels with migrant deaths today in the Mediterranean.

Book cover of ‘Hope’
The book’s publishers say Francis wished for Hope to come out after his death, but brought it forward for the current Catholic jubilee year and the “needs of our times”. Once intrigued by Argentine strongman Juan Perón, he opposes today’s sectarian populism. The antidote to it is “entering into harmony with the soul of the people”.

For this very accessible pope, God can be found in humour, football and Fellini films. But above all it’s in the willingness to talk and listen to others with respect: “the culture of encounter”. Francis constantly mentions old acquaintances whom he still remembers to call regularly. Readers might wonder if the papacy is a secretarial role.

There’s a revealing passage about his unexpected election as pope, including how initially undecided cardinals including himself began by supporting unviable “stop-gap” candidates while they gauged the winds. It makes the film Conclave seem broadly accurate. Even when elected, Francis made sure to call his newspaper delivery man in Buenos Aires to cancel his order.

One of his hallmarks has been admitting his own sins and errors, including using homophobic language. He does similarly here, owning up to instances of thoughtlessness (although, amusingly, in an afterword, his co-author, publisher Carlo Musso, takes sole responsibility for any errors in the text).

There are omissions. The book dwells more on his 33 years before becoming a priest than the 50-odd years since. By focusing on his youth, Francis skirts over how he has changed since. We know from biographies that he was a divisive leader of Argentina’s Jesuits in the 1970s, with an authoritarian style and a dislike of liberation theology, the branch of Catholicism focused on systemic injustice. A period in the wilderness, along with economic crisis in Argentina, changed his perspective.

Major controversies are dealt with briefly. There have been questions over whether, as Jesuit leader, Bergoglio could have done more to protect Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics, two Jesuit priests, and followers of liberation theology, who were tortured by Argentina’s junta. He wraps it up in half a page, insisting: “I tried everything.” Francis also deals only briefly with child sexual abuse in the church. Some readers will find this frustrating, and notice that he has quibbles with accusers that he doesn’t with, say, migrants.

Francis remains mostly popular with the faithful, but has faded from wider view somewhat; this book strives to revive the early glow around his papacy. His message is that the church should look outward and forward. Clerics should have less power; women more. Traditionalist approaches to Catholicism often tend to “clerical ostentation”. Better to learn the languages of migrant worshippers — Vietnamese, Spanish — than Latin, he suggests. Sexual sins “are really not the most serious”, compared with, for instance, pride and fraud. Homosexuality is “a human fact”.

Despite this, the Pope is still Catholic. He condemns gossip and swearing. He has watched virtually no TV, even his beloved football, since being outraged by an undisclosed “sordid scene” in 1990. He emphasises his continuity with his conservative predecessor, Benedict XVI. The book includes a photo of Benedict handing over a box of documents, outlining how to clean up the Vatican.

Francis offers no detailed account of his Vatican reforms or his ongoing battles with US conservatives. A secretive London property deal, which led to the conviction of the Pope’s chief of staff for embezzlement and fraud, was “truly terrible”, he says, without elaborating much.

There was arguably a previous papal autobiography: the Commentaries of Pius II, pope from 1458 to 1464. Published posthumously under another author’s name, these ended with Pius preparing for his dearest cause, a crusade against the Ottomans.

Francis is no soldier. Influenced by his Italian grandfather’s experience of the first world war, he denounces war as “always useless massacre”. At the end of Hope, he turns instead to the elephant in the room: people’s loss of faith. Worldwide, the number of Catholics is growing, but this can be misleading as it is based solely on the amount of baptisms. Data regarding active participation and faith reveals a different picture. More than a quarter of Americans say they are atheist, agnostic or similar; church attendance has fallen sharply in Europe. He insists, surely wishfully, that “there is no more secularisation in the Church now than in former times”.

Anyway, Francis says, Catholics should distinguish themselves less by their piety and more by their example: that is, less by whether they are believers and more whether they are believable. Hope is not always believable. Yet its enthusiasm for human interaction is, like the urge for autobiography, surprisingly hard to resist.

Hope by Pope Francis with Carlo Musso, translated by Richard Dixon Viking £25/Random House $32, 320 pages
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Seeing God's face, hearing God's voice we can ask: Do I feel loved and accompanied by God, or do I think God is distant from me? Also remember your baptism!
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