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    HomePoliticsWho wins when politics and religion collide, particularly during a federal election?

    Who wins when politics and religion collide, particularly during a federal election?

    Politics and religion. Raise these topics at your Easter family gathering and you may get fireworks.

    But the 2022 federal election straddles the most important event on the Christian calendar, so how does the role of faith fit on the political spectrum?

    In the heart of Queensland’s so-called Bible-belt, bishop Cameron Venables is not afraid to raise topics usually shunned in polite conversation.

    “Sometimes I meet people who say, ‘We don’t want you to talk about politics because religion and politics shouldn’t mix’,” he said.

    “I find that almost incomprehensible.”

    Bishop Cameron Venables is based in Toowoomba.(Supplied: Anglican Focus)

    The Western Regional Bishop in the Anglican Church Southern Queensland said it was time to take a leap of faith and open up the conversation.

    Separation of church and state?

    As Australia’s first pentecostal prime minister, Scott Morrison has attracted criticism from secularists worried about the threat of theocracy, but he is not the first political leader to openly practise a Christian faith.

    Opposition leader Anthony Albanese has spoken about his Roman Catholic upbringing.

    In secular, multicultural Australia, Christianity is still the dominant religion — 12 million people identified as ‘Christian’ in the 2016 census.

    A medium close-up of a man smiling.
    Simon Smart is the director of the Centre for Public Christianity.(Supplied)

    Simon Smart, the director of the non-denominational Centre for Public Christianity, said the term ‘conservative Christians’ was a modern stereotype.

    “Historically, Christians have been very prominent in what people think of as progressive movements,” he said.

    Changing tide

    Mr Smart points to the Christian church’s involvement in the formation of trade unions, female suffrage, and the anti-slavery movement.

    “But it is also true that in the last 20 or 30 years, as countries like Australia have become more secular, there has been a bit more of a capturing of significant parts of the Christian constituency with one end of politics.

    “The Christian church is such a spectrum of different denominations, but also different political views. And it really should be that too.”

    Scott and Jenny Morrison sitting in the front row of a church, with Anthony Albanese and Richard Marles alongside them
    Prime Minister Scott Morrison has never shied away from his faith.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

    Political commentator and Griffith University associate professor Paul Williams said the role of faith in people’s voting intentions had declined over the years.

    He said until a few decades ago, Roman Catholics could be counted on to vote Labor, while Presbyterians were “90 to 95 per cent Liberal Party”.

    “There had been a very strong link between voting and church, but that has really withered away,” Dr Williams said.

    “Regional Queensland has a higher level of Christian identity than most of the rest of Australia, but that’s not the reason they swung to [Scott Morrison in 2019].

    “They swung because he was pro-mining, liked football and wasn’t going to introduce new taxes — an Australian with whom they could identify. It really had nothing to do with Christianity.”

    What would Jesus do?

    So, on today’s political spectrum, would Jesus fit anywhere?

    “I think he’d blow up Vote Compass actually,” Mr Smart laughed.

    “I think it’s a bit presumptuous to try to guess — certainly for me — what he might do in any given situation.

    “But we’d probably be able to broadly say he’s likely to be radical when it comes to issues of justice and care for the poor, but deeply conservative when it comes to issues of personal ethics, healthy systems, building communities, and that type of thing.”

    Anthony Albanese looks concerned, the walls of a church stand out of focus behind him.
    Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese was raised in a Catholic home.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy)

    Authenticity in leadership

    For Bishop Venables, all aspiring political leaders should take a leaf out of Jesus’s book.

    “Jesus was a leader who genuinely listened to others and went to others to hear their perspective,” he said.

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