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  • The need to separate religion, politics

    East Valley Tribune, AZ
    September 20, 2008 - 7:04PM

    The need to separate religion, politics

    Sam Coppersmith, Commentary

    While visiting a small Franciscan college last week, I toured a nearby
    historic chapel with the college priest, who learned that I was headed
    to a family funeral. While knowing I wasn't a Catholic, he offered to
    say a prayer for the rest of my relative's soul.

    I appreciated his gesture and took comfort. I also figured, what the
    heck, it couldn't hurt. But not everybody feels warm and fuzzy about
    receiving a proffered benefit of another's religious belief,
    especially when you're not asked first.

    Take the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints practice of
    posthumous baptism, where LDS believers represent deceased non-Mormons
    in a symbolic baptism (hence it's also called vicarious or proxy
    baptism).

    Baptism is required to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, but under LDS
    doctrine, the deceased have free agency, the power to accept or reject
    the proxy baptism. From that perspective, posthumous baptism "couldn't
    hurt." Current LDS Church members can grant their ancestors and
    relatives entrance to heaven. Yet each person, even after death, may
    accept or reject the proxy baptism, so the ceremony isn't binding in
    any way.

    But not everybody feels "it couldn't hurt," and controversy erupted in
    the 1990s with the discovery that LDS proxy baptisms included many
    Jewish victims of the Holocaust, with some 380,000 Jews killed by the
    Nazis appearing in LDS genealogical records. In 1995, the LDS Church
    agreed to stop the practice for Holocaust victims where descendants
    did not consent.

    Jewish groups strongly objected, partly from the sad Jewish historical
    experience with forced conversions, and partly from the special regard
    that Jews have for Holocaust victims and survivors. If the victims
    were killed solely for their religion, a posthumous conversion - even
    one grounded in doctrinal free agency, to be accepted or rejected
    voluntarily - could appear to rewrite the historical record.

    Jewish groups aren't alone in qualms about posthumous
    baptism. Armenian Christian and Russian Orthodox leaders denounced the
    practice, and earlier this year, the Vatican Congregation for Clergy
    directed Catholic dioceses not to allow the LDS International
    Genealogical Index to microfilm and digitize information in parish
    registers. The Vatican wants to stop posthumous baptism of Catholics,
    which spokesmen called "detrimental" and "unacceptable."

    So sometimes when you think it couldn't hurt, it actually does. I had
    some readers who believe differently than I do offer to pray for me
    because of last week's column. One guy even seemed pretty sincere. But
    it points out one pretty big difference between religion and politics,
    and a problem for those who want more religion in politics: The whole
    point of politics in a democracy is to argue about what's best, but
    with religion, you just can't do that.

    We can argue about whether the problem with health care is caused
    because people aren't faced with the economic consequences of their
    choices, or if health care isn't like other consumer goods because
    people don't respond that way to their own health and their
    physicians. We can argue about whether we should bail out AIG and not
    Lehman Brothers. But it's hard to argue in any productive way about
    whether my view of the non-divinity of Jesus is better than
    yours. After all, listing certain dead people on a secret baptismal
    list makes some who believe differently absolutely furious.

    Religion is all about fundamental belief - and even bringing it up in
    any discussion is an invitation for everybody to take offense. One
    man's pithy comment another man finds politically, and religiously,
    incorrect. And why would we want more of that in politics?

    So maybe the separation of church and state makes sense after
    all. Those who took such umbrage at religious discussion, stated more
    in terms of my beliefs than theirs, or of the precise religious
    content of the Catholic Campaign for Human Development, should think
    long and hard about my overall argument against putting more religion
    into politics.

    And thanks to Prof. Mark Kleiman at UCLA, I now have a non-religious
    way to make the same initial point: Martin Luther King was a community
    organizer. George Wallace was a governor. Now pick your side of that
    argument.

    Sam Coppersmith, Democratic party activist and former member of the
    U.S. House, can be reached at [email protected].
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