[1] On a recent flight to Pittsburgh, several professors from a
near-by university sat behind me discussing the danger of mixing
religion and politics, particularly if the mixing is done by the
likes of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, whom my fellow
academicians compared to Islamicists like Osama Ben Laden. That
outrageous and false comparison aside, the professors voiced a
complaint that many others have also registered. For example,
Salman Rushdie, in an otherwise moving meditation on Islam's
propensity for religionized politics, concludes that "religion must
be restored to the sphere of the personal and private, replaced by
the secularist-humanist principles of modernity." Even Andrew
Sullivan, the Catholic political analyst who should know better,
argues that there must be a "separation of politics and religion."
No doubt many of our citizens think similarly.
[2] However, they are wrong if they indeed mean the separation
of religion and politics rather than the separation of church and
state, which is quite a different matter. The latter stipulates
institutional separation; the non-establishment of any particular
church. This separation has been enormously beneficial to the life
of both state and church in this country. It has prevented the
political use and control of religion by the state while at the
same time it has required the churches to stand on their own. The
separation of church and state has fostered a vitality in American
religion unmatched by the tamed state churches in other parts of
the world. Except for a tiny group of Christian
"reconstructionists," no Christian churches in America - including
the vilified fundamentalists - argue for the collapse of the state
into the church or vice versa.
[3] If it is possible and desirable to separate church and
state, it is neither possible nor desirable to separate religion
and politics, as the above commentators advocate. It is not
possible because of the nature of serious religion. The great
religions of the Book - Judaism, Islam, and Christianity - are
comprehensive in nature. Since their God is the God of all reality
and history, serious Jews, Muslims, and Christians simply cannot
sequester the claims of God to the private, personal sphere. The
religious and moral visions of these religions are relevant to all
of life-economics, politics, and culture. This means that religious
citizens and political leaders will necessarily express their
religious and religiously-grounded moral beliefs in their
politics.
[4] The separation of religion and politics is impossible for
another reason. The First Amendment provides for the free public
expression of religion. Freedom of religious expression means
nothing if it is limited to the private sphere, as it is has always
been in totalitarian states. In America the public expression of
religious claims is constitutionally guaranteed. It is
constitutionally impossible to keep religion out of politics.
[5] It is also very desirable that Judeo-Christian religion -
along with other factors - informs politics. Without religiously
based moral principles it will be difficult, if not impossible, to
sustain a decent political order. The most important religiously
grounded moral principle is the sanctity of the person, or what the
noted political philosopher Glen Tinder calls the "exalted
individual." The preciousness of each person is grounded in the
Judeo-Christian teaching that we are created in the image of God.
From a Christian point of view, each person is also redeemed by
Christ. The "exalted individual" is the central value of Western
politics, Tinder rightly claims. Even Enlightenment notions of
unconditional respect for rational agents are a reflection of that
fundamental religious conviction. On this notion of the exalted
individual rests the doctrine of human rights, the practice of
democracy, and the universal obligation to pursue justice. If each
person counts before God, then regimes based on these religious
values have to strive for respect and justice for all. Though these
values are never fully realized, they are expressed in many
profound ways, even to the point of treating those condemned to die
with exquisite respect.
[6] Where these fundamental values are denied, as in Nazism and
Marxist-Leninism, humans are turned into corpses at astounding
rates. One only has to visit the Holocaust Museum to view the
ghastly results of this denial. Someday there will perhaps be a
museum to commemorate the victims of Soviet and Chinese Marxism,
which will be even more legion than those of Hitler.
[7] Therefore, it is not desirable to separate vital religion
from democratic politics. Such a separation would in time be a
disaster for Western politics. However, it is important that
religious institutions and persons maintain a proper humility about
their political offerings. It is rare that a specific policy
follows necessarily from the core of religious and moral values.
Almost always there are three or four steps in arguing for a
particular policy from that core. Persons of intelligence and good
will often part company with each step. Religion in politics must
be accompanied by humility in participation.