My fellow Christians. Today on this solemn Good Friday, we gather not in triumph but in remembrance. Two thousand years ago, on a hill called Calvary, our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified. He was nailed to the cross for the sins of the world — for your sins and for mine. He hung there, forsaken, bleeding, and dying, so that we might have life, and have it more abundantly.
In that moment of utter darkness, when the sky turned black and the earth shook, the Son of God bore the weight of every human sorrow, every injustice, every broken promise.
Here in the UK, we know something of bearing heavy burdens. For too long our people have carried the cross of a housing crisis that shames us as a Christian nation. Families sleep in damp rooms or on friends’ sofas. Young couples are priced out of the very towns where their grandparents were born. Veterans who fought for this land return to find no home waiting for them. This is not merely an economic failure; it is a spiritual one. When a nation forgets that every roof is a reflection of God’s own provision — “In my Father’s house are many mansions” (John 14:2) — then the people suffer.
The National Housing Party UK stands before you today as a voice rooted unashamedly in the Christian Faith that built this island kingdom. We are Christian British Nationalists because we believe Britain’s greatness was never an accident of geography or economics, but a divine calling. Our laws, our liberties, our very sense of justice were forged in the fire of the Gospel. That is why we pledge, without apology, to put British citizens and their families first in British homes.
On this day of the Cross we remember that true leadership is sacrifice. Christ did not come to be served, but to serve. He did not promise ease, He promised that if we take up our cross and follow Him, we shall overcome. So we say to every family struggling with rent, every young person locked out of home ownership, and every community watching its character dissolve under the pressure of endless migration and speculation, your suffering has not gone unseen.
The National Housing Party will build the homes Britain needs — not glass towers for Globalist elites, but solid, affordable houses for working British families in the towns and villages that made this country.
We will restore the sacred link between faith, family, and hearth. We will defend the Christian inheritance that teaches us a home is more than bricks and mortar; it is the first school of love, the cradle of the next generation, and the foundation of a godly nation. Let no one tell you that faith has no place in public life.
On this Good Friday we reject the lie that Britain must become a secular museum of its former self. The cross stands at the centre of our history — from the conversion of our Saxon kings to the hymns sung in our churches. We will not allow the memory of that cross to be privatised or shamed. A nation that honours the sacrifice of Calvary will once again honour the sacrifice of its own people by giving them roofs over their heads and hope in their hearts.
As the sun sets today and we wait in the tomb of Holy Saturday, know this: resurrection is coming. Just as Christ rose victorious on the third day, so Britain can rise again — a sovereign, secure, and unapologetically Christian nation where every family has a home, every child has a future, and every street reflects the values that once made us great. May the mercy of the Crucified Lord rest upon each of you and upon our beloved United Kingdom. May He strengthen us to carry the cross of national renewal until the day of resurrection dawns. God bless the National Housing Party UK and God save our country.














