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Anger at 'Godless' Christmas
By Paul McCann, Media Editor
The BBC has been accused of taking God out of Christmas by a Church of England
bishop who is outraged that the corporation has no act of worship on television on Christmas Day.
In a letter to The Independent, the Right Reverend Christopher Herbert, Bishop
of St Albans, calls for an inquiry into the public service credentials of the BBC. He writes: "It claims to
be a public service broadcaster. Nothing could be further from the truth as far as religious broadcasting is concerned.On
Christmas Day on BBC television there is not a single act of worship."
At the General Synod this year the church's communications unit announced that
it would be monitoring the BBC's output because of fears that it was moving religious broadcasting to the margins.
In October, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr George Carey, pulled out of presenting an Easter Week series when
he learnt the programmes would be aired in the 11.30pm "graveyard slot".
Bishop Herbert said yesterday: "There has been an abandonment of religious
broad- casting. You have to switch between bands to find anything on radio and on television it is all being pushed
to the margins.
"Christmas Day is not just any day. But the BBC is saying you can stuff
yourself with food, but forget about God. It should be providing a service to the thousands of elderly and infirm
people who would like to take part in a recognisable act of worship along with the thousands of others who will
be attending church that day."
A BBC spokeswoman denied that religious viewers were being under-served on Christmas
Day. "We are televising midnight Mass on Christmas Eve [and] a hour-long act of worship from Liverpool Cathedral
on Christmas morning from 9am [on radio]. A more broad-based Christmas carol programme is on television in the
morning and there is a bible reading in the evening. Often these criticisms come from people who are unaware of
how much we do actually have on. The bishop is being disingenuous if he does not wish to include what we have on
radio as well as television. There has not been an act of worship on Christmas Day on television for six years."
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