
Two British Methodist pastors become Lords
By KATHLEEN LaCAMERA
LONDON -- Two Methodist pastors
have taken up seats in Britain's House of Lords.
The Rev Leslie Griffiths, Superintendent
Minister at Wesley's Chapel in London, and the Rev J. Roger Roberts,
a minister serving in the Welsh Dyffryn Conwy Circuit, were among
the 46 people awarded "life peerages" for their service
and contributions to the British Empire.
They were officially presented
to the House of Lords on June 30.
"It was a bolt from the blue,
it really was," Lord Griffiths told United Methodist News
Service.
Used to a high-profile congregation
at Wesley's Chapel, he thought that the representative from Prime
Minister Tony Blair's Cabinet who appeared on his doorstep had
come for a pastoral chat. "I made a pot of tea and sat down
thinking I knew what she wanted to chat about, but I didn't."
Lord Roberts received the news
of his life peerage via fax while serving as the interim pastor
of the largest Welsh congregation outside Wales, the Dewisant
Church in Toronto. The congregation immediately gave their 68-year-old
visiting pastor a standing ovation.
The life peerages and other similar
awards are part of the 2004 Queen's Birthday Honours list. Those
on the list are recommended by political and community leaders
throughout the United Kingdom. Honours are awarded to individuals
from all walks of life.
The particular category of "life
peer" brings with it the title of "Lord" and full
voting rights within the House of Lords. "The Lords"
is Britain's second parliamentary body after the House of Commons
and has some similarities to the US Senate.
Both Lord Griffiths and Lord Roberts
come from Wales and will take on names reflecting their Welsh
roots. The Rev Leslie Griffiths becomes Lord Griffiths of Pembrey
and Burry Port in the Dyfed. The Rev Roger Roberts becomes Lord
Roberts of Llandudno.
Fluent in French, Lord Griffiths
and his wife, Margaret, spent 10 years in Haiti working directly
for the Haitian Methodist Church on issues related to education
and community development. That first-hand experience has made
him a valuable adviser on Haiti to the UK Labour Party and the
Blair government.
A former president of the British
Methodist Church, Lord Griffiths has also worked extensively on
international issues related to Africa and the Middle East. He
has served as a teacher, headmaster and school governor at home
and abroad and has also been active in addressing urban social
problems related to homelessness, addiction, penal reform and
resettlement of displaced people.
Lord Roberts, who had since returned
to Britain from Canada, told United Methodist News Service that
he still "hadn't come to terms" with his peerage.
He was from a quarrying (mining)
background, he explained. "When your fathers and grandfathers
have been toilers and hard workers, to think one of their family
members has got a peerage, it is really a totally incredible situation.
It shows British democracy at its best."
In addition to serving in his
North Wales Methodist circuit for 34 years, he has been very active
in the Liberal Democrat Party in Wales and has run for political
office on five occasions.
Like Lord Griffiths, he has a
passion for international work. He has been involved in development
and relief efforts in Rwanda and Ethiopia and is also committed
to children's advocacy in the UK and overseas.
Lord Griffiths said: "I've always fought hard to stop the
church in bewildering times from retreating and turning in on
itself. We [the church] have important things to say about the
world."
Lord Roberts, who confessed to wanting to duck under the table
every time someone refers to him as "Lord" said: "I
really think that God has called me to this. I intend to be a
Methodist minister in the House of Lords and look forward to working
with my fellow Methodist ministers."
Lord Griffiths and Lord Roberts will join the only other ordained
Methodist in the House of Lords, Kathleen Richardson, Baroness
of Calow, who was named a peer in 1998. She was the first woman
to serve as President of the British Methodist Church.
Kathleen LaCamera is a United Methodist News Service correspondent based in Manchester, England.