“We are social creatures living in various intersecting networks of relationships. Even today most people still shape their personal faith and spirituality with input from others, especially authoritative figures...we still consider the ways we see other prominent people living their faith and allow them to influence our own spiritual life...they restore our hope and inspire us to become better people, drawing us back again and again to God’s grace, Christ’s love, and the Spirit’s presence in and among us...At the heart of looking at someone else’s faith, you often discover what it is that you yourself believe and how you also want to live out those beliefs.
“Believing in something greater than oneself is the only way to survive this life...We need hope in this world. We need faithful examples. We need strong leaders unafraid to show us how to persevere in the midst of life’s tragedies...As we grow older, well, one must choose, mustn’t one? How will we love those around us, the way Jesus showed us to love, and still carry on with whatever we’re called by duty to do? It requires suffering, doesn’t it...you accept life as a slow parade of losing those you hold most dear. Or you can retreat from life and withdraw to one’s own devices, but you miss the joy of the parade, then, don’t you?
“Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor, Lilibet, Princess, Her Royal Highness, the Grace of God, the Queen of Great Britain and Head of the Commonwealth, Her Other Realms, and Territories. Defender of the Faith. Her Majesty...No matter her title or role, Queen Elizabeth II reflects the love of the King she serves.” “The world’s most famous woman,” serves as “an ambassador of cultural history and an emblem of national pride but also as a role model, philanthropist, iconic leader, and Christian.” Her Majesty “has much to teach us about living out our faith and following the example set by Jesus Christ.” Like biblical Queen Esther, Elizabeth also “accepted a call placed on her life at an early age...She navigated safe passage between the Scylla of duty and the Charybdis of desire. The only way to wear the royal grandeur of the monarchy was to remain clothed in her humanity. And her Christian faith remain the thread stitching person and personage, duty and desire, together.” In The Faith of Queen Elizabeth, Dudley Delffs shines a spotlight on the faith of Queen Elizabeth and explores what we can all learn from her example.
When a painting of the Queen was defaced by a smear of acrylic spray paint in 2013, the incident of vandalism seemed to serve as a metaphor for the life and reign of Her Majesty. Throughout her life, Queen Elizabeth experienced criticism; however, she transformed faultfinders into constructive critics. She sought voice coaches and speechwriters to lower her voice and smooth her clipped accent and spoke on television even though she despised it. Her sister Princess Margaret’s entanglement in an affair with divorced officer Peter Townsend compelled the new queen to “navigate matters of the heart using the compass of the Church and uphold duty while bearing the criticism inflicted by a wounded sister.” In response to First Lady Jackie Kennedy’s snide remarks about her effectiveness (or lack thereof), the Queen seized the opportunity to address a Cold War crisis directly--the dancefloor with the Ghanaian President himself! Despite differences on sanctions and apartheid, the Queen apologized to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and awarded her both the Orders of the Garter and of Merit. The people’s Queen Elizabeth engaged the enormous outpouring of public grief at the passing of the “People’s Princess” Diana. Refined in the fire, her reign proved resilient and her character, “a patina of nostalgic appreciation and abiding gratitude.”