Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

CHRISTIAN ORDER CAMPAIGN

WHAT ABOUT POLITICS? ADDRESS AT DUNEDIN (r A? .. Dunedin, Sept. 21. ,„ xlle Question as to whether the Church has any authority to speak about politics ,and if so, what it has to say, was discussed by the Rev H J. Ryburn, M.A., 8.D., Master of Knox College, in the Dunedin Town Hall this evening at the third in the series of broadcast public meetings in the Campaign for Christian “What About Politics?” was the title of Mr. Ryburn’s address. There was, he said, a strong feeling that the Church should mind her own business and not meddle in politics. But what was the Church’s business? “I doubt very much if we shall readily accept the statement that the Christian faith has to do merely with a life after death,” he continued, "unless it has a direct relevance to the problems of practical life, and by that I mean not merely our private and personal problems, but also the problems of our social existence, that faith will not long survive as a living religion. If the Christian faith has nothing to say about politics she will have nothing worth while to say about anything.” At the same time it has to be made clear that the Church, as distinct from individual Christian citizens, was not concerned with the technical side of political questions: it was on the moral aspects that she was bound to speak if she took her duty seriously So what the Church had to say about politics would usually be of a general nature. Having postulated general principles she must leave their working out largely to those entrusted with the task. Therefore she must stand above party or sectional interests, because she belonged to them all. Law and Order It also had to be made clear that the Church believed in government, for there could be no stable society without law and order, and whatever criticism the Church might feel bound to make about particular policies, she must remain fundamentally loyal to the State. “Furthermore, if the Church believes that government is a God-giyen task, she must believe that political life is an honourable calling, demanding the very highest mental and moral qualities. The Church can have no part in that popular, tolerant contempt for the politicians . . . Let there be no mistake about this. Where government is held in contempt, the seeds of decay are already germinating in the body politic.” Yet all these statements needed a fundamental modification, continued Mr. Ryburn. While the Church believed in government and owed loyalty to the State, she also believed that above the authority of every State, no matter how powerful, stood the authority of Almighty God. Most emphatically the Church did not believe in an Absolute State. "For this reason, if for no other, I believe that the Church is bound to endorse and to support the implacable opposition of our own nation and her allies to the Axis Powers ... but the tendency to exalt the State into an end in itself and to a position that is above the moral law is not something to be found merely among the Axis Powers. It is a tendency which menaces all government, and a danger against which the Christian must always be on guard. With the dogma ‘My country right or wrong’ the Christian can have nothing to do. The truest patriotism is that which, while it honours the King, fears God first. For this reason, the Church will always claim the right to criticise the State in the light of her unde standing of

. e law of God . . . Where the right of criticism is lost the way is paved for totalitarian tyranny. The Church can thus never view with equanimity any attempt by the State to monopolise the means of education and propaganda.” Peace, Unemployment, Education Dealing briefly with specific spheres in which in his opinion the Cnurt-h has, or should have, something to say, Mr. Ryburn said that she must stand for international law and the abolition of war. The sovereignty of the State must be curbed and restricted in order to promote international order and world peace. How tins was to be done was not for the Church as such to decide, but it was an ideal the Church must always support. In the second place, the Church npd something to say about unemployment and work. Any social system which permitted idleness in one section of the community, which imposed it on another, while it overworked a third, was a wrong system and should be amended. How this was to be done was largely a matter of practical or technical politics and again outside the sphere of the Church as such. But there was one thing to be said by the Church, especially at this time: “A stable society can never he built upon the basis of party faction . . . Whoeser uses the present crisis to push the interests of his party against the interests of the nation is a traitor and should be branded as such.” Finally, there was the issue of education. The Church could not remain content with a system of education which was at once compulsory and secular. "Unless this country is prepared to forego the right to use the adjective Christian, and I doubt if we are, we must continue to demand full opportunity for bringing the influences of the Christian faith to bear upon education. We stand in danger

to-day of becoming a godless people largely because we have banished God from the classroom ... I for one will never be content with a state of affairs which limits to the children of the well-to-do the privilege of an education which is open to the influences of religious faith, while denying that privilege to the children of the poor.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19420922.2.18

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 223, 22 September 1942, Page 3

Word Count
968

CHRISTIAN ORDER CAMPAIGN Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 223, 22 September 1942, Page 3

CHRISTIAN ORDER CAMPAIGN Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 223, 22 September 1942, Page 3

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert