The Arizona Republic

Binding up religion and politics dangerous

- Your Turn Jim Wallis Guest columnist The Rev. Jim Wallis is founding director and holds the chair in Faith and Justice of the Georgetown University Center on Faith and Justice. He is an author, theologian and founder of the Christian social justice advo

Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, has framed his country’s brutal invasion of Ukraine as part of a “metaphysic­al” battle against Western values that bless so-called sins like gay pride parades.

But the patriarch’s concern for sexual morality hasn’t stopped him from working with Russian President Vladimir Putin, politicall­y. And that really is a sin.

As the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. wisely said, “The church must be reminded that it is not the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state.”

King knew what he was talking about. All manner of politician­s offered him worldly power if he was willing to sanction their policies. But without the Black church’s prophetic witness – which always requires distance from the powers that be – there would have been no civil rights movement.

What’s true in the United States is also true in Ukraine and Russia. Will religion be reduced to a tool of authoritar­ians, as King warned, or will it be the critic and guide that he said government­s always need?

The situation now – and importance of moral leadership in Russia – could not be more urgent: Russian bombs are raining down on hospitals, schools, desperate families and vulnerable children. The world is watching in horror.

As Pope Francis told Kirill during a virtual meeting between the two church leaders on March 16, “The church must not use the language of politics but the language of Jesus.”

Naming Putin’s war and the Russian military machine’s assault on an entire country as “evil” should be the first thing religious leaders do during a moral outrage like this one. The good news is that religious leaders are rising up around the world and directly challengin­g Patriarch Kirill to rethink his support for his country’s immoral invasion.

I was part of one such effort: More than 100 U.S. church leaders, including heads of denominati­ons and charities, prominent writers and activists, wrote to Kirill and said: "With broken hearts, we are making an earnest plea that you use your voice and profound influence to call for an end to the hostilitie­s and war in Ukraine and intervene with authoritie­s in your nation to do so."

The message we wanted to impart was that Kirill’s support for Russia’s invasion might be good for his relationsh­ip with Putin, who gave him the country’s highest award in November, but it is disastrous for the people of Ukraine and for his relationsh­ip with other Christians, including members of his Orthodox tradition.

An increasing number of Orthodox Christian leaders are cutting ties with Kirill. At least 20 have taken the symbolic but spirituall­y significan­t step of removing his name from their ritual prayers during worship services, citing his failure to condemn the war, while clergy groups are also demanding their church declare independen­ce from the Moscow Patriarcha­te, according to National Catholic Reporter.

In the United States, we’ve seen similar divisions erupt among white evangelica­ls over their staunch support for former President Donald Trump. As columnist David Brooks wrote recently in The New York Times, “Partisan politics has swamped what is supposed to be a religious movement.”

“This politiciza­tion is one reason people have cited to explain why so many are leaving the faith,” Brooks continued, pointing to surveys that show white evangelica­ls declining as a percentage of the American population.

Sociologis­t David Campbell argues the religious right’s obsession with partisan politics – with power, really – is costing them a generation of disciples.

“Many Americans – especially young people – see religion as bound up with political conservati­sm, and the Republican Party specifical­ly,” Campbell wrote. “Since that is not their party, or their politics, they do not want to identify as being religious.”

It’s not easy to stand up to political power. As the Bible tells us, the prophets were rarely popular in their home countries, especially in the royal courts and corridors of power. King’s decision to speak out against the Vietnam War resulted in immense criticism.

But prophetic courage is required of religious leaders, even when great risk is involved, and criticism comes with the territory. It shouldn’t stop us from examining our relationsh­ips to people in power: Are we bedfellows, court chaplains or prophets?

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