Can politics and religion mix? explain your answer...
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Little sect is big player in Philippine politics
AFP, France,May 3,2004,Cicil Morella,
www.inq7.net
Iglesia ni Cristo, a small but well-connected sect that votes as one, is set to reprise a familiar role as kingmaker in the closely contested May presidential elections.
The Iglesia, literally Church of Christ, has in the waning days of the campaign reportedly distributed sample ballots to its voting members, estimated to number at least a million, instructing them to choose President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Theologically, the Iglesia ni Cristo is a cult of Christianity due to its rejection of core doctrines of the Christian faith
Her main rival Fernando Poe had been courting the Iglesia voters because their total is roughly equivalent to the theoretical number of votes that the movie star needs to catch up with Macapgal-Arroyo, based on the results of the latest opinion surveys, which have him trailing the incumbent by 4.5 percentage points.
Ms Macapagal-Arroyo describes herself as “a good customer of Iglesia ni Cristo” and says she consults with its reclusive chief minister, Erano Manalo, whenever she has problems.
She says the sect helped her top the senatorial elections in 1995 and win the vice presidency in 1998.
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El Shaddai: "Some believe that El Shaddai plays a major role in Philippine politics. They assert that former President Fidel Ramos won the 1992 Presidential elections because of El Shaddai's votes, although this has never been corroborated with an actually tally of votes correlated with El Shaddai membership rosters. Some counter this claim as well by stating that El Shaddai members vote independently."---wikipedia
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The Ecleos: In the 1995 PCIJ book "Boss: Five Case Studies of Local Politics in the Philippines," PCIJ investigated how politics and religion combined into a potent, if not deadly brew, in the Ecleo family's fiefdom in Surigao. Much of it still holds true, though PBMA now boasts an even bigger and more fanatical following.
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If politics and religion do not mix, what of politics and cults?
source: archbishop cranmer blogspot
When the issue of the
Catholicism of Senator John F Kennedy was emerging as an issue in his quest to become President of the United States of America, he made a speech, in which he said:
"But because I am a Catholic, and no Catholic has ever been elected President, the real issues in this campaign have been obscured - perhaps deliberately, in some quarters less responsible than this. So it is apparently necessary for me to state once again - not what kind of church I believe in, for that should be important only to me - but what kind of America I believe in."
He was struggling to persuade the sceptical American people that the White House would not become an embassy of the Vatican, and neither would the US President do the Pope’s bidding, but, for a nation born out of the struggle for liberation from religious tyranny, his words frequently rang hollow. Yet the prejudices were overcome by his oratorical skill. At times, the communication of his dreams and visions were redolent of Martin Luther King Jnr:
"I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute - where no Catholic prelate would tell the President (should he be Catholic) how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote - where no church or church school is granted any public funds or political preference - and where no man is denied public office merely because his religion differs from the President who might appoint him or the people who might elect him."
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Can politics and religion mix?
source: telegraph.co.uk
Tony Blair has said that his religious beliefs were central to his premiership but that he was reluctant to discuss them because “people think you’re a nutter.”
Mr Blair told BBC television in The Blair Years: “Of course it was hugely important. You know you can’t have a religious faith and it be an insignificant aspect because it’s profound about you and about you as a human being.”
Should politics and religion be kept separate?
Why are American political leaders so open about their religious views, whereas British leaders are reluctant to discuss their faith?
Would you prefer an elected leader with a strong faith or a secular approach?