Interesting article in today's Sydney Morning Herald has got us thinking - see
In the name of the Father
It follows Melb uni academic Anna Crabb's work on religion in speeches by Australian parliamentarians.
While this blogger has no problems with politicians holding religious beliefs, I do have a major problem with the concept of ultra-right-wing fundamentalist nut jobs of any flavour attempting to hijack the political debate like they managed to do so well in the the US of A under Bush.
"Values" is the catchphrase they so hideously like to use, as if left wing drug addicted homosexual abortionists can't have any values...well I met one in a bar once, and I'm telling you they do.
The closest organisation we got to the US style groups is probably the Australian Christian Lobby who are a bunch of self appointed wonks with lobbyist passes and biased survey questions, who run around parliament house trying to drum up support for "values". Very self appointed, not taken so seriously I'm told by the bigger churches. However they have had some success from time to time but also some big failures like RU486. In the usual ultra right-wing style they hate abortion and euthanasia and gays and embryo science and blah blah but in a very unchristian way they also want to force everyone else to live like them. At least they aren't quite as mad as the saltshakers (who we can file under UL = Extreme Loony) and others (like anti-science Family First?) but aside from the major religious bodies they are the most organised in Canberra.
My issue is - haven't we got more important things to worry about?
I mean where was the ultra right Christians like these on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars? People die there - even embryos sometimes. Where are they on developing world debt that is killing millions from starvation and cheaply preventable disease? More dead. No they'd prefer that we all focus our attention on some slightly wayward pissy teenage girl from Queensland who once forgot to take her pill. Well i for one think that most middle class Queensland teens are good enough to deal with there own problems. Most.
There was a show about 6 months ago on the Radio National's religion report that suggested some of the US christian fundamentalists are toning down and are actually becoming genuinely concerned with social justice issues and even the environment. There are also rumours about that the happy clapper kings at Hillsong are similarly leaning away from their supposed "prosperity theology" roots, (you're rich cos god loves you - you're poor cos god HATES you!) and over to a little more social justice. Next step folks- enhance music tatses.
Lets hope more of the fashion for a little social justuce around the world trickles down to Australia - to our right-wing nut bags, and to our politicians.