Tuesday, 26 August 2014

PRACTISING CHRISTIANITY IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY WITH SECULAR LAWS. THE CASE OF NIGERIAN CHRISTIANS, ESPECIALLY IGBOS WHO ARE PREDOMINANTLY CHRISTIANS. BY HON. E.U. SAMUEL ( LLB) HONS. LONDON



There can be no doubt that the freedom of religion, belief and opinion in the open and democratic society , contemplated by the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is important. The right to believe or not to believe, and to act or not to act according to his beliefs or non beliefs, is one of the key ingredients of any persons dignity. Yet, freedom of religion goes beyond protecting the inviolability of the individual conscience. For many believers, their relationship with God or creation is central to all their activities. It concerns their capacity to relate in an intensely meaningful fashion to their sense of themselves, their community, and their universe. For millions in all walks of life, religion provides support and nurture and a framework for individual and social stability and growth. Religious belief has the capacity to awake concept of self-growth and human dignity which the corner stone of human Rights. it affects the believer's view of the society and founds the distinction between right and wrong. it expresses itself in the affirmation and continuity of powerful traditions that frequently have an ancient character transcending historical a pocks and national boundaries.

The underlying problem in any open and democratic society based on human dignity, equality and freedom in which conscientious and religious freedom has to be regarded with appropriate seriousness, is how far such democracy can and must go in allowing members of religious communities to define for themselves which laws they will obey and which not. such a society can cohere only if all its participants accept that certain basic norms and standards are binding. Accordingly, believers cannot claim an automatic right to be exempted by their beliefs from the Laws of the land. At the same time, the State should where reasonably possible, seek to avoid putting believers to extremely painful and intensely burdensome choices of either being true to their faith or else respectful of the Law.

Before setting out to apply to substantiate on being real to the faith and the Law, it would be conducive of clarity to discuss the issue of proportionality analysis on the area of religious rights. The most complex problem is that the competing interests to be balanced belong completely to different conceptual and existential orders. Religious conviction and practice are generally based on faith. Not only do they proselytise through the media and in the public square, religious bodies play a large role in public life, through schools, hospitals and poverty alleviation relief. they command ethical behaviour from their members and bear witnesses to the exercise of power by State and private agencies, they promote music, arts and the theatre, they provide hall for community activity, and conduct great variety of social activities for their members and the general public. They are part of the fabric of public life , and constitute active elements of the diverse and pluralistic Nation contemplated by the Constitution.
Religion is not just a question of belief or doctrine. it is part of a way of life, of a peoples' temper and culture. The result is that religious and secular activities are, for the purposes of balancing, frequently as difficult to disentangle from conceptual point of view as they are to separate in a day to day practice. While certain aspects may clearly be said to belong to the citizens Caesar and others to the believers God, there is a vast area of overlap and interpenetration between the two. It is in this area that balancing becomes doubly difficult, first because of the problems of weighing consideration of faith against those of reasons and secondly, because of the problems of separating out what aspects of an activity are religious and protected by the law.

In conclusion, the Law of the State has the capacity of making the Believers sinners if, the law is not balanced and proper regards given to the faith of the believers helping them to be real to their faith. The essence of equality lies not in treating every one in the same way, but in treating everyone with equal concern and respect and the Christian believers in any democratic setting must be regarded to enable them to true to their faith. The Believers also must be reasonable in electing people who will have respect and regards to their faith and not people who would us the legislations to make them sinners.

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