Oldgateboatdriver
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 2,250
- Points
- 1,010
tomahawk6 said:Your Parliment lacks a chaplain ?
Actually, T6, I would not have phrased the question as you did. The use of "lacks" would presume that one is required, which in Canadian politics, is not the case. We don't have one, and we don't need one. And, as was indicated above, religion plays no part in our politics and we couldn't care less about our politician's religious views.
I suspect that last part might be different if a politician openly proposed in his platform to use the precept of his/her religion to adopt laws imposing those canons on people in general: In Canada, such politician would be totally rejected by the electorate.
Our different relation to religion harks right back to the actual origin of our respective countries: While the USA was settled in good part by religious groups from Europe, and in particular England, who were emigrating to the new world specifically to escape religious persecution and practice their religion freely, Canada was settled by uniformly catholic French and solid protestant Englishmen and Scotts. When the British took over from the French in central Canada, the numbers did not favour any attempts at changing their religion, so there was no religious persecution at all in Canada, which then made it possible for instance for the Irish immigrants to come here and insert themselves in the catholic stream. No one felt, as result, that it was important to keep one's religion at the fore-front of the political discourse, lest one's right to practice one's religion came under attack.
As for the developments thereafter, it more or less follows the evolution of religious freedom enjoyed by most in the U.K. While the Queen (she is our Queen too) is the embodiment and the "defender" of the Faith - the Church of England Faith - in practice, she does not interfere with her subjects religion anymore (It was different in Elizabethan times - Liz the first that is). It is one of those numerous and incredibly strong powers that she holds (to impose a religion on her subject), but does not exercise in practice so Parliament does not need to legislate to take it away from her. :tsktsk:
The overall result is that both in Canada and the UK, the "religiosity" of our politicians and our public space simply evolves with the views of the population in general. And for most of the last 40 to 50 years, that general view has been that religion is private matter for people and has no place in the public sphere generally and in politics in particular. Canada (and the UK) is near being truly secular in nature because that is how the population wants it.
That is why you will never hear Canadian politicians ending their political speeches with "god bless" or "may god bless Canada' or words to that effect. I have to say, in our modern world, it always makes me (and many other Canadians I know) chuckle whenever we hear American politicians ending their speeches that way in our era. :nod: