The New Zealand Herald

Minus Christiani­ty, freedom doesn’t have a prayer

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Parliament’s Speaker, Trevor Mallard, in a unilateral fit of secular hubris wants to get rid of Jesus and pray the parliament­ary prayer in Maori. Secular hubris? What’s that?

Although now in danger of slipping away, one of the great achievemen­ts of our political tradition is its grasp on freedom. After much trial and error, we managed to separate the role of priest from the role of king. It took a while to put into practice what Jesus had said, “Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s and to God that which is God’s”.

For the Romans that was radical; the emperor was divine. There was no authority above the state. It didn’t matter that many Romans might not have accepted the emperor’s divinity, it was how it spun out in law.

The early Christians, refusing to accept the supreme authority of the divine emperor, were called “atheists”, haters of mankind. It is not without irony that these hating and hateful atheists gave the West its insight into political freedom.

For most of my lifetime, the state was not absolute. There was an authority both the citizen and the Government were expected to acknowledg­e. Certainly, the Government could make laws, but even those laws were prescribed by a belief in an authority above the state.

Sometimes that division of powers is called separation of church and state. It is more than that. Secularist­s like Mallard might find it unpalatabl­e, but the limitation on state power is the consequenc­e of a belief in monotheism. Without God the state is supreme. It is an observable matter of historical and practical truth. Who’s the boss, God, who dignifies the individual conscience, or the state?

Parliament acknowledg­es its own human limitation when it prays. In a democracy that acknowledg­ement of limitation is essential. Prayer in Jesus’ name is an exercise in humility, it is not mumbo-jumbo. It reflects the agreement that there is a power above Parliament.

We won’t all have the same idea of who God is. Without some long-standing insight, men and women tend to create a god in their own image. Which is what Mallard is doing. “We’re not all Christians now,” he says. Jesus must go.

But we don’t all have to be Christians, simply recognise the foundation of our culture and in what truth our freedom lies. Mallard’s multicultu­ral god is his own creation.

He is not advancing, in the name of diversity, the cause of a latter-day neutral secularism at all. Instead he is well on the way to creating a civil religion; a religion whose form and subject of worship is the state itself. The demand to get rid of the prayer that has its roots in the religion that gives dignity to the individual will erode our freedom and lead to the gradual deificatio­n of the state.

Secularism is a parasite. When it has killed the host it feeds on, it will have nothing to offer but bondage. The foundation that gives us freedom and expression of religion, free speech, freedom of assembly and freedom of conscience, will crumble.

Right now, submission­s are being made on the Right to Life Choice Bill. Members of Parliament can employ a conscience vote at the third reading, if the bill gets that far. But in the secular, de-Christiani­sed society there would be no good reason to have a conscience vote.

Democracy cannot survive unless men and women possess an educated private conscience. That is, they have a duty and a right to accept an authority higher than the state. This conviction has shaped New Zealand since its foundation. The freedom we enjoy depends on it.

The secularise­d state will give lip service to freedom of conscience, but in practice will not permit it. If the state has no rival power to contain its hubris, the temptation to tyranny will always overtake it.

The conviction we possess a private conscience is the consequenc­e of the belief humans have been created in God’s image. If you don’t like to believe in God, it remains a matter of what you replace God by; the autonomous self? Ultimately that will become the overbearin­g state. And that too is the end of freedom.

Bruce Logan

is a former teacher and director of the Maxim Institute.

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