<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd"><channel><title><![CDATA[The New English Catholic' with Gavin Ashenden.]]></title><description><![CDATA[The New English Catholic with Gavin Ashenden explores faith, culture, and public life through the lens of historic Christianity. Drawing on Scripture, the Fathers, and the lived tradition of the Church, these reflections seek to form the mind, steady the conscience and strengthen the heart. <br/><br/><a href="https://drgavinashenden.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast">drgavinashenden.substack.com</a>]]></description><link>https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/podcast</link><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 21:33:29 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/6094008.rss" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><author><![CDATA[Gavin Ashenden.]]></author><copyright><![CDATA[Gavin Ashenden.]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[drgavinashenden@substack.com]]></webMaster><itunes:new-feed-url>https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/6094008.rss</itunes:new-feed-url><itunes:author>Gavin Ashenden.</itunes:author><itunes:subtitle>This substack is devoted to a celebration of and a promotion of the Catholic Church and the Christian faith, with the intention of meeting the needs of both the head and the heart.</itunes:subtitle><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Gavin Ashenden.</itunes:name><itunes:email>drgavinashenden@substack.com</itunes:email></itunes:owner><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:category text="Religion &amp; Spirituality"/><itunes:category text="Religion &amp; Spirituality"><itunes:category text="Christianity"/></itunes:category><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/6094008/5e2db4ae7d3064da31b22432b7d3c9da.jpg"/><item><title><![CDATA[Murder in the bath, the blind man, and a sacked policeman. ]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p></p> <br/><br/>This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit <a href="https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_2">drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/p/murder-in-the-bath-the-blind-man</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:200924476</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Gavin Ashenden.]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2026 18:52:03 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/200924476/04602545998a477e2b849e8cef3b7f31.mp3" length="11481166" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Gavin Ashenden.</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>844</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/6094008/post/200924476/5e2db4ae7d3064da31b22432b7d3c9da.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA["I can't breathe"- The handcuffing of a murder victim & the death of our culture.]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p></p><p><strong>The facts for those unfamiliar with them:</strong></p><p><p>Gavin Ashenden - 'New English Catholic' is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></p><p><em>(Henry Nowak was an 18-year-old British university student who was murdered by Vickrum Digwa on 3 December 2025 in Southampton England. Digwa, a 23-year-old Sikh, cut and stabbed Nowak a total of five times using a knife. When police arrived, Digwa accused Nowak of assault, and they handcuffed Nowak. Nowak died shortly after being handcuffed, begging the police to believe he had been stabbed.</em></p><p><em>Shortly before the stabbing, Nowak had filmed Digwa walking away from him, during a verbal altercation. Digwa maintained that he acted in self-defence after Nowak continued pursuing him, made racist remarks, and punched him. Prosecutors argued the evidence showed Digwa had lied.</em></p><p><em>The jury convicted Digwa of murder on 28 May 2026. Digwa’s mother, Kiran Kaur, 53, was found guilty of assisting an offender. The judge rejected Digwa’s accusations that Nowak had physically or racially abused him. Digwa received a sentence of life imprisonment, with a minimum of 21 years. The police’s response to the crime, which was recorded by their body-worn cameras.)</em></p><p>Before writing this piece, I forced myself to watch the video from the Police cameras that was released only today showing Henry Novak dying as he lay on the floor and cuffed by the police who refused to believe him, and as a matter of prejudice, preferred to believe the lies and accusations made by his murderer.</p><p>It is hard to write dispassionately.</p><p>However:-</p><p><strong>the tragedy of Henry Nowak raises a deeper question than guilt or innocence: </strong></p><p><strong>We are challenged with facing the consequences of what happens when a society abandons Christian anthropology and replaces it with a secular doctrine of human perfectibility.</strong></p><p>“I can't breathe” became one of the defining moral slogans of our age. Yet in the death of Henry Novak the phrase returns with dreadful irony. A dying man lay handcuffed on the floor while those trusted with protecting the innocent were too brainwashed  to recognise where the real danger lay.</p><p>The shock of being told about the way or watching the video of how  Henry Nowak died, stabbed to death by a Sikh who combined murder with character assassination, leaves us wanting to hold somebody accountable and to blame them.</p><p>Obviously, his murderer is to blame. But that is not a sufficient solution because the police created such a gross injustice that we are shocked to our core at what this represents about what our society has become.</p><p>And it is very tempting to blame the police. However difficult it is to control our sense of outrage and injustice in the timeworn phrase, they too are casualties of a sort, for they were trained – in fact brainwashed, in the art of the new secular moral idealism that has replaced Christian philosophy and ethics.</p><p>So, our real enemy is not (just) the police, who committed this gross injustice because they were brainwashed by those who trained them, but rather the anti-Christian ethic that overcame Christian philosophy and culture.</p><p>We may come to the conclusion that the tragic death of Henry Nowak, stabbed and misrepresented, handcuffed and injured, is the final outcome of this terrible philosophy of ethics: secular moral idealism. </p><p><strong>The Real Enemy</strong></p><p>The enemy we are struggling against needs to be given a name. That is not an easy process, but let us do what we can and identify it as <strong>secular moral idealism</strong>.</p><p>Secular moral idealism is the belief that human beings are morally perfectible through education, legislation and social engineering. It seeks to abolish what we might call the universal human phenomenon of “fear of the other” because such fear offends against the humanist assumption that people can be educated into virtue and compelled by law to behave accordingly.</p><p>Christianity takes exactly the opposite view, which is one reason secular moral idealism finds Christianity so difficult to tolerate. Christianity believes that human beings are not perfectible and therefore require both restraint through law and transformation of mind and soul.</p><p>The conflict before us is therefore not merely political. It is anthropological. It concerns what kind of creatures human beings actually are.</p><p><strong>The Fiction of Racism</strong></p><p>We could begin by doing what has recently become almost impossible, and that is to examine critically the modern concept of racism.</p><p>This is high-risk commentary indeed because racism has become one of the gravest sins anybody living in a culture formed by secular moral idealism can commit.</p><p>And yet the concept itself has become increasingly vacuous. The emperor of racism has no clothes. He is naked and dangerous.</p><p>The problem is not that people are incapable of hostility towards others. We clearly are. The problem is that racism has become an elastic and politically charged category that is invoked constantly but defined only vaguely, if (scientifically) at all.</p><p>There is no scientific definition of race itself, and therefore no stable foundation upon which the modern moral panic surrounding racism can comfortably rest. What has happened instead is that racism has become a shorthand, impossible to define precisely and impossible to recognise consistently, for that great blasphemy against humanistic optimism: fear of the other.</p><p>It is time, it is long past the time that the Church found some courage and confronted this confusion with robust intellectual energy. If we continue to surrender to these conceptual ambiguities and distortions, we will never be able to confront the deeper shortcomings of secular moral idealism itself.</p><p><strong>The Return of Thought Crime</strong></p><p>Worse than the instability of the concept of race is the fact that this elusive distinction has increasingly morphed into a thought crime.</p><p>And so, our society combines two dangerous errors. First, it attempts to criminalise something whose boundaries remain hopelessly uncertain. Secondly, it presumes that it possesses the ability to look inside the mind of the accused and discern evil intent.</p><p>The danger of thought crimes is that they become the superstructure upon which authoritarian societies are built. They are a political and psychological mechanism for attributing moral guilt despite the fact that we cannot see inside one another’s heads.</p><p>The distinction between action and motivation is notoriously difficult to determine with certainty. Yet secular moral idealism increasingly insists that it can do exactly that.</p><p>The modern sin of racism has therefore become a politicised version of the universal human experience of fearing the unknown.</p><p><strong>The Moral Janus Effect</strong></p><p>If we are to unravel this ethical confusion, we need to recognise what might be called moral dualism.</p><p>Every moral principle has two sides to it. Perhaps we should call it the <strong>moral Janus effect</strong>.</p><p>Janus was the Roman god who looked both ways: the god of doorways, beginnings and transitions. We might invoke him as a reminder that every moral principle contains within it the possibility of both vice and virtue, wisdom and folly.</p><p>So, in the case of fear of the other, there is a perfectly sensible form of caution towards strangers which we are hardwired to possess and which is frequently dismissed as racism.</p><p>When a stranger approaches us, there is no immediate way of knowing whether he comes as a friend or as a threat. Prudence, therefore requires caution until we understand who the stranger is and what his intentions may be.</p><p>Fear of the other, in this sense, is not irrational. It is part of the way human beings have been equipped to deal with uncertainty and danger.</p><p>But this should not be confused with the lazy fear of the other, which, cannot be bothered to discover the virtue that may lie beneath unfamiliar customs, unfamiliar clothes, unfamiliar tastes and unfamiliar habits.</p><p>That is a sin of laziness, more than hatred.</p><p>Neither of these responses constitutes racism in any meaningful sense, and each must be judged according to its own merits and demerits.</p><p>The Janus principle reminds us that prudence and prejudice can look superficially similar while being morally very different indeed.</p><p><strong>Neighbour and Stranger</strong></p><p>Christianity has its own ethic for dealing with fear of the other, whether legitimate or illegitimate, and it is expressed in the invitation to love our neighbours as ourselves.</p><p>But the neighbour is, almost by definition, somebody we know.</p><p>We may not like them. They may irritate us. They may annoy us or even damage us. But we know them.</p><p>They are not the same as the stranger.</p><p>It would be foolish to construct a moral law that simply said, “Love the stranger as yourself,” because that would deprive us of the ability to discover whether the stranger had our best interests at heart or had come to destroy us. Much depends upon context. A stranger may be vulnerable and alone, or he may come as part of an invading army.</p><p>A neighbour, however, is somebody whom we have come to know.</p><p>The profundity of the biblical command to love our neighbour is rooted in the Christian understanding that our neighbour is made in the image of God. God has invested Himself in that person’s creation and preservation.</p><p>The recognition of God in our neighbour is expressed through the requirement to offer love, not because the neighbour has earned it, but because God has associated Himself with the neighbour’s existence.</p><p><strong>Honouring Henry Nowak</strong></p><p>One of the reasons Henry Nowak lay bleeding on the street and was handcuffed by police who falsely attributed racist motivation to him is that we as Christians have surrendered too easily to the moral blackmail of secular moral idealism.</p><p>We have accepted a confused and increasingly incoherent understanding of racism in place of something more challenging, more complex, more demanding and more serious.</p><p>Our institutions have in turn been trained to enforce that ideology in its contemporary woke form.</p><p>No lasting good will come from this terrible tragedy if we end up blaming Sikhs as a community (though the murderer was a Sikh who weaponised racism against his victim); or the police as an agency (though they surrendered to moral myopia and practiced injustice) , or even those ideologues who have imposed secular moral idealism upon the agencies of our culture (though they are creating a police state against the very people they were engaged and charged to protect.)</p><p>We should instead honour the death of Henry Nowak by finding the courage to engage in a renewed philosophical and theological argument with those who have succumbed to the seductions of secular moral idealism and its belief that human beings can be perfected through education, legislation and ideological conformity.</p><p>The deepest conflict before us is not between races, cultures or religions. It is between two rival visions of the human person. It is between secularism and Christianity. It is between Rousseau and Marx, and Jesus.</p><p>One insists that human beings are perfectible through education, legislation and social engineering.</p><p>The other recognises that human beings are fallen, capable of both virtue and vice, and therefore in need not merely of instruction but of redemption.</p><p>The tragedy of Henry Nowak should remind Christians that whenever we abandon the biblical understanding of human nature, we do not become more compassionate. We become more vulnerable to illusion.</p><p>And illusions, when armed with institutional power, eventually demand victims.</p><p>If this death teaches us anything, it is that the Church must recover the confidence to proclaim once again the truth about man, sin, judgement and salvation.</p><p>Only then will we possess the intellectual and moral resources to resist the next injustice and repudiate a system that is being constructed on injustice, before we are finally and completely imprisoned.</p><p></p><p></p><p><p>Gavin Ashenden - 'New English Catholic' is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></p> <br/><br/>This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit <a href="https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_2">drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/p/i-cant-breathe-the-handcuffing-of</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:200304621</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Gavin Ashenden.]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 15:14:40 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/200304621/4fed2c5aff66ff94ba17412b9150d4a2.mp3" length="11074799" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Gavin Ashenden.</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>807</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/6094008/post/200304621/a0d33719253dce460fb540173087c6cb.jpg"/></item><item><title><![CDATA[At the Edge of the Abyss: Euthanasia and the Fight For Human Dignity.]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p></p><p>In the Image and Likeness of God.</p><p>Those of us who hold to a Catholic understanding of the human person — seeing each life as sacred because it is made in the image of God — have, for decades now, found ourselves resisting a growing secular pressure to legalise euthanasia.</p><p>The Arguments</p><p>The arguments are by now familiar. On the one hand, we hear appeals to autonomy, freedom of choice, and the understandable desire to avoid suffering. On the other, there remains a deep moral conviction that life and death are not ours to dispose of at will — and that once the boundary is crossed, the consequences are neither contained nor benign.</p><p>Experience bears this out. In Canada, there are now documented cases of disabled individuals being offered euthanasia because it is cheaper than providing basic support such as accessible housing. In the Netherlands, even teenagers suffering from depression have been granted euthanasia. What were once presented as tightly safeguarded exceptions have, in practice, expanded in ways that place the most vulnerable at risk.</p><p>The argument, therefore, is no longer theoretical. It is grounded in real examples of systems in which safeguards have failed, and where the logic of euthanasia has begun to erode the dignity it was supposed to protect.</p><p>Professor David Jones - </p><p>In this conversation, I speak with <strong>Professor David Jones, Professor of Bioethics at St Mary’s University, London,</strong> and one of the central figures in the campaign against euthanasia in the United Kingdom. </p><p></p><p>Together we explore what has just taken place in the Scottish Parliament, why the proposed legislation was defeated, and what this may mean for the future of similar efforts at Westminster — where time is running short and the outcome remains finely balanced, both procedurally and in the court of public opinion.</p><p>Who is Prof David Jones?</p><p>Professor David Jones is Professor of Bioethics at St Mary’s University, London, and one of the United Kingdom’s leading voices in medical ethics. He has written extensively on the moral, legal, and clinical implications of euthanasia and assisted dying.</p><p>He has been closely involved in public and parliamentary debates on end-of-life care, and has played a significant role in shaping the ethical case against euthanasia in Britain.</p><p>Professor Jones brings together philosophical clarity, clinical awareness, and a deep concern for the dignity of the human person.</p><p>Please press the link below for the Interview:-</p><p></p><p></p> <br/><br/>This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit <a href="https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_2">drgavinashenden.substack.com/subscribe</a>]]></description><link>https://drgavinashenden.substack.com/p/at-the-edge-of-the-abyss-euthanasia</link><guid isPermaLink="false">substack:post:191483389</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Gavin Ashenden.]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 15:43:55 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/191483389/d3ef1a92dfe6390ca4e723cf948d9322.mp3" length="25340714" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:author>Gavin Ashenden.</itunes:author><itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>2090</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://substackcdn.com/feed/podcast/6094008/post/191483389/2c14baa0fbcfaed273a57082d1e083f4.jpg"/></item></channel></rss>