*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Paul Vallely: Holy Week has its own geopolitics

by
02 April 2026

Paul Vallely contrasts the events of 2000 years ago with what happens today

Alamy

Roman Catholic worshipers carry their children on their shoulders as they march in a procession during a Palm Sunday Mass in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday

Roman Catholic worshipers carry their children on their shoulders as they march in a procession during a Palm Sunday Mass in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunda...

AS HOLY WEEK began, a mother sat wailing in lamentation of the death of her 11-year-old son, who had been playing football when the air strike happened. Ordinarily, we might set down her nationality, or name the politician who ordered the indiscriminate air strike, but the calendar has a way of sharpening our moral vision.

Holy Week invites us to view unfolding events in the Middle East in a different light. A cycle of violence, grief, and retaliation still dominates the headlines, but, through the lens of this week, it feels less like geopolitics and more like a test of human conscience.

Holy Week tells a story about power and its misuse. On Good Friday, the Roman state executes a man whom it deems a threat to order. Jesus has challenged the authority of the scribes, elders, and chief priests. He has insisted that the poor matter and that mercy outweighs ritual. The leaders of the Jews fear that Jesus will incur the wrath of Rome, which will lead to a crackdown that will destroy their nation and Temple. So, they incite the mob to threaten a riot that will place Pontius Pilate in a bad light in Rome. Holy Week demonstrates what happens when political authority, fearful and brittle, chooses force over justice.

In the Middle East today, we see echoes of that same dynamic. States and non-state actors alike claim necessity, security, even righteousness. The US Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, who has started leading Christian services at the Pentagon, underscored that last week by praying “let every round find its mark”, and invoking “overwhelming violence . . . against those who deserve no mercy”.

On Palm Sunday, Pope Leo XIV rebutted such perversion, recalling the words of the prophet Isaiah: “Even though you make many prayers, I will not listen: your hands are full of blood.” The Pope continued: “Jesus is the King of Peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war. He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.”

The language of necessity has a way of obscuring the human face. Civilian casualties are rendered as statistics. Suffering is flattened into abstractions. But the crucifixion is not a mass event: it is one man, abandoned, tortured, and killed. And yet in that one life all suffering is gathered. It asks harder questions: Who bears the cost of our political decisions? Whose suffering do we fail to see? And what would it mean to break rather than perpetuate the cycle of violence?

One of the most radical teachings of Jesus is the command to love one’s enemies. It is a line so familiar that it risks becoming an empty counsel of perfection. But to love an enemy is not to excuse wrongdoing or abandon the pursuit of justice. It is to refuse the logic that says that the suffering of the other is justified by our own. It rejects the idea that peace can be built on humiliation or annihilation. It places human dignity above considerations of strategic gain.

For all that, the church calendar does not coincide with the cycles of life or of the generations. For the woman whose 11-year-old was killed while playing football, there will be no resurrection on Sunday.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Letters to the editor

Letters for publication should be sent to letters@churchtimes.co.uk.

Letters should be exclusive to the Church Times, and include a full postal address. Your name and address will appear below your letter unless requested otherwise.

Forthcoming Events

Church Times Festival of Preaching 2026

13 - 15 September 2026

An event to inspire, nurture, and celebrate all who are called to proclaim the gospel today.

tickets available now

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

New to us? Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. Simply sign up for a free account to receive the Church Times newsletter, plus exclusive offers and events, straight to your inbox. As a thank you for joining us, we are also currently offering a £5 discount for the Church House Bookshop online (valid for one order of £30 or more). See your welcome email for details.