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Pluralism, Religion and Public Policy An address delivered at the McGill University conference on Pluralism, Religion and Public Policy, and published in the National Post (Canada)October 6, 2002 Reproduced with permission. Preston Manning founded the Reform (later Alliance) Party and is a former leader of the Official Opposition in the Canadian House of Commons. |
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By Preston
Manning People of faith - and there are millions of such people in Canada - need guidelines on how to bring faith perspectives to bear on public policy in a winsome rather than an offensive way. And public policy makers in our pluralistic society - many of whom regard faith perspectives with suspicion if not outright hostility - need to learn how to incorporate such perspectives into their deliberations rather than exclude them. These are two propositions which I hope to lay before this week's Conference on Pluralism, Religion, and Public Policy in Montreal, sponsored by McGill University's Faculty of Religious Studies and the Centre for Cultural Renewal. Why even spend time on "religion and public policy" some of my skeptical secular friends will ask. Because, while organized religion may be in decline and disrepute, the "spiritual dimension of life" is not. For millions of Canadians, "things spiritual" - including many of the core elements of historic Christianity - continue to occupy a significant place in their personal lives and therefore should not be excluded from public policy considerations. Almost ten years ago, "The Religion Poll" conducted by Angus Reid and published by Maclean's magazine found that eight out of ten Canadians affirmed their belief in God, and that two thirds of all adults subscribed to the basic tenant of Christianity, the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Almost one third of the adult population claimed to pray daily and more than
half to read the Bible or other religious literature at least occasionally.
A similar poll conducted eighteen months ago by Ipsos-Reid and the Globe and
Mail found that 67% of Canadians said their religious faith was "very
important" to their day-to-day lives, and that seven in ten Canadians agreed
that through the life, death and resurrection of Jesus, God provided a way
for the forgiveness of their sins. There is a third reason, however, why faith perspectives are often not
welcome in the political and public policy arena. And this is something
which people of faith must address and correct themselves. |