The possibility of
separating politics from religion
E.
Ablorh-Odjidja
March 12, 2015
The
Overseer and General Manager of High Praise
Tabernacle Church, Rev. Dr. Adjei Mensah,
has disparaged Rev. Prof Matey, the
Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of
Ghana, for mixing politics with religion.
This raises
a question about religion and politics in
general. Can the two be kept separate in
Ghana and who among these two religious
leaders knows how?
Rev Dr.
Mensah criticized Rev. Prof Martey on a
radio talk show in the following manner:
"The
Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of
Ghana is ...more of a politician than a man
of God," he said.
Dr.
Mensah's accusation was in response to what
the Moderator was purported to have said in
a sermon " that some politicians were
deliberately stoking a nonexistent
Christian-Muslim war to divert attention
from the worsening power crisis"
Dr. Mensah
continued, “If Rev Martey believes he is a
righteous man he can enter his closet and
pray a faith prayer which will change the
course of Ghana, but attacking the
president, insulting [him] every time is not
fair."
Not
preaching from "his closet," therefore not a
"righteous man"?
Well, how about
the view that Dr. Mensah's response was not
made from the " closet" either, but rather
from the national airwaves?
The answer
perfectly sums up my view of Dr. Mensah.
I take
umbrage at the implied self-idolatry of not
being a "righteous man." It is not polite,
coming from a leader of a religious group.
And worse, it betrays a rancor that is
deeply partisan than churchly; more so than
what he saw in Rev. Martey.
As an academic,
Dr. Mensah could have raised the issue on
theological grounds, in a letter to the
Christian Council or with the Presbyterian
Church. Perhaps, he did. But I doubt
because if he did, his accusation would not
have gone suddenly public.
Furthermore, his challenge for Rev. Martey
to fix the broken-down Presbyterian schools
omitted the fact that it was government's
interference that reduced the mission's
schools to the present condition.
Is Dr. Mensah
interested in helping mission schools?
If so, he could raise the issue with
the government on his own.
The
Presbyterian Mission Schools that Dr. Martey
represents has a legendary history dating
back to early or mid-19th century. Should we
assume that High Praise Tabernacle Church
has the same standing?
Still, some
civility is required here, certainly among
pastors.
But since insults have become the
common dialect among our politicians,
shouldn’t we assume that Dr. Mensah, with
the insult to Dr. Martey, is on his way to
becoming a politician?
Dr.
Mensah’s style is, perhaps, up there
in league with that of local politicians and
that must warn us that there is trouble
ahead for our entire nation.
But back to
the main theme. Does Dumsor deserve a
theological comment from a pulpit?
Obviously, it does, because of its
manifestation of the spiritual stress it
puts on people.
A refutation of
the false alarm on Christian/Muslim conflict
is also evidently a theological necessity.
Raising this conspiracy theory of a conflict
just to quell the crisis of Dumsor is not
only stupid. It is dangerous and explosive.
In some
matters, one cannot keep religion out of
politics any more than one can prevent his
or her lungs from breathing these days.
God's work on earth must be done at all
levels before the deserving can get to
heaven. And no pastor must be
exempted.
It is obvious
Dr. Mensah is for the government.
It is his right to do so.
But this must not earn him the right
to use Christianity to bash Dr. Martey, who
obviously is not for the government.
Dr.
Mensah by doing so sounds like a
shill for the government.
Any bootlicker or fake faith-healer
can mount the pulpit to provide this
service.
Still,
nothing must prevent Dr. Mensah from making
his observations on Dr. Martey known to the
Christian community. But he is yet to
explain rationally why this Moderator, in
the face of a national disaster like stoking
a conflict between Christians and Muslim
Dumsor, must be silent.
The
government itself already knows that Dumsor
is a national disaster.
Somewhere in
life, politics and religion do collide. The
sacred cannot stay out of commenting on the
failings of the secular. Governance
attracts amoral pursuits like corruption.
Dr. Mensah, the Overseer of his church, must
have a concern here.
All of us,
including the Moderator, have civic
obligations to push for solution to crisis
of the sort that is lurking here. But,
apparently, Dr. Mensah would rather have
Rev. Martey remain silent because as a
pastor, he should have no role in politics.
Keeping an
opponent silent in this manner is the job of
politicians and political parties.
Dr.
Mensah has already done the job, run a
perfect interception for the government.
The edict
"Render unto Caesar the things that are
Caesar's, and unto God the things that are
God's" would have sufficed had government in
the modern age not taken over so many areas
of our lives.
Caesar
has transformed himself into a god.
Therefore, the religious need not be
reticent about all secular matters.
Dumsor has
taken too long to fix and it is causing
havoc in Ghanaian lives; deaths, serious
setbacks in the economy and some other
consequences.
Has Dr. Mensah
so far said anything publicly about Dumsor?
Nor really.
This leader prefers to stand in the
pulpit and watch the flock dance to the
front of the pew to drop their offerings!
Rev. Martey
spoke not only because of government's
inability to arrest Dumsor, but also to warn
off the possibility of a Christian/Muslim
conflict.
This act has nothing to do with
interference of governance.
The notion that
religious leaders ought to respond to the
societal as well as spiritual needs comes
from the underlying goodness that most
religions embrace. It is this goodness that
some theologians through sermons seek as
impact on governance.
I grew up
knowing some pastors of the Presbyterian
Church who were outspoken on social issues.
This practice is historical and universal -
dating back to the days of the Prophet
Jeremiah and to those of our ancestors of
the indigenous religion.
As a
protestant church, the Presbyterian Church
had a beginning that spoke against political
power. The Ninety-Five Theses of Martin
Luther, and the resulting Reformation
movement, had theological concerns at its
core but many of them were also political.
There are
copious examples in recent age of church
leaders taking on civil society - Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Pope John Paul II for
example.
Perhaps,
Dumsor affects the flock at High Praise
Tabernacle Church in the same manner as it
does the rest of us. But its Overseer
and General manager prefers to be silent on
the matter.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher,
www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, March 12,
2015 Permission to publish: Please feel
free to publish or reproduce, with credits,
unedited. If posted at a website, email a
copy of the web page to
publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at
all.
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