If Scott Morrison, like all previous prime ministers, kept his religious faith to himself and strictly separated from his public role, then there’d be no good cause to say anything about it.
Up until now, he has tiptoed a narrow line, promising that his government’s policies will not be driven by his beliefs, while occasionally putting his religious observance on very public show. Fair enough; it is a tricky balance for any leader and society is accustomed to respecting that.
It wasn’t Morrison who released the video of his speech to the Australian Christian Churches conference on the Gold Coast last week. However, he flew there and back on a government plane at taxpayers’ expense and was explicit that he was speaking as prime minister, not a private citizen. The content of what he said left that unarguable anyway. It is a matter of legitimate public interest to appreciate the full meaning of his words.
Assuming that Morrison was speaking honestly to his audience (surely he was?), he said several things of significance:
- He believes that he and Jenny have been called upon to do God’s work as prime minister and wife;
- He does not believe that he can “save the world” on his own, and called on Christian leaders to help God with that task by propagating their faith to the people;
- He has “been in evacuation centres where people thought I was just giving someone a hug and I was praying, and putting my hands on people … laying hands on them and praying”;
- He believes that the “weapons” of social media can be “used by the evil one and we need to call that out”.
The problem here is one of elision. It’s easy to fall into the bias-trap of eliding Morrison’s genuine faith — in which context his belief that he is doing God’s work is hardly surprising — with a claim that he has impermissibly crossed the church-state divide. That would be unfair and ignorant of history. Most of our prime ministers have publicly held religious faith of one sort or another.
An atheist, or a religious believer who draws a clear personal boundary between personal faith and secular society, may be unhappy about a prime minister who believes that that boundary doesn’t exist. But that is a political question, not a legal one.
Likewise, one might be personally upset by the thought that the prime minister has been going around the country surreptitiously performing religious acts (laying of hands) on unsuspecting citizens under the guise of simple empathy. That does raise a legitimate question of consent; arguably, it may even be a form of assault. Essentially, though, it’s still a political concern — is that the kind of thing you want your national leader to be doing?
The revelation that Morrison believes that the “evil one” — presumably synonymous with Satan, the Devil, Lucifer, the Antichrist, etc — is actively participating in social media is in a different class. This is an elision of which we should take notice.
The federal government makes and enforces many laws that affect communications, including broadcasting and online media. For example, the government has been actively legislating and regulating social media via the digital platforms review being conducted by the ACCC to inform competition law; the media bargaining code, which directly regulates social media platforms; the regulation of social media’s content by new criminal offences created in the wake of the Christchurch massacre; legislation relating to online grooming and child abuse materials; actually there’s a lot of this, and it’s constantly growing.
The point is that social media is an extremely active area of policy-making activity by the Morrison government, all of which falls under a completely new light now that we know the prime minister believes that some or much of the problems with social media are literally the work of the Devil. I’m not mocking that belief, merely saying that it is a very particular and significant perspective.
It also clearly crosses the church-state divide. The separation of church and state is intrinsic to western democracy, a principle established in direct response to the horrors of sectarian government exemplified during the reigns of the Tudor and Stuart monarchs of England.
The principle is enshrined in the Australian constitution, by its explicit prohibition on the establishment of a state religion or imposition of “any religious observance by law”.
The second part of that admonition is dangerous ground, on which it can be argued that the prime minister has apparently been stepping. If the laws that his government has been promoting, including its advocacy of a religious freedom bill, are in fact being driven by a belief that what those laws are combating are not secular problems (people and corporations behaving badly) but evil per se, which is a strictly sectarian belief, then we are in the realm of converting a form of religious observance into the law of the land.
That is the problem when politicians proclaim their faith while wearing their public suits. Our prime minister is tilling perilous soil.
During the last lead up to the Federal election, The PM and his crew landed in Devonport, disembarked, and came out from the fenced area in their SUV’s. I was standing just outside the fence with my grey hair, awaiting the vehicles with a mum with her child who looked to be about 8 yrs old. The cars stopped and out jumped the PM, who gave me one half of a “once over” glance on his way to the mum and child to do his laying on of hands. I did previously regret the oversight of his attention (it would have taken a nanosecond for a nod or a handshake) and have thought it was harbinger of the slights that the aged and other vulnerable populations have suffered in his government. But now, with this new information, I feel much better! I prefer to be prayed over only when I request or have been asked!
You had a very narrow escape!!
Sorry Marilyn, your comment has set me off into hoots of laughter. I have visions (underline ‘visions’) of you waiting to be annointed by the illustrious hands and being overlooked, you aged unworthy one you. I wonder what he said in his prayers during and after his stint in New Zealand in late 1990s See recent Crikey article on that.https://uat.crikey.com.au/2021/04/21/how-destructive-scott-morrison-ask-kiwi-cousins/
If I pray to God that Morrison gets beaten at the next election, and he loses, does that mean God was no longer listening to him, or that God decided he had done enough damage?
We have to hope that God does not tell Scotty to start a war.Australia beware we have a PM who communes with an invisible being who no doubt helps with Policy!
So if Morrison thinks social media is the work of the devil, then I look forward to no further cringeworthy posts from his Facebook, Twitter or Linked In account as he desperately tries to reach a broader audience. I also look forward to these platforms not being part of his election campaigning.
Oh wait…
My thoughts exactly. No more Facebook announcements? No more Cabinet Ministers on Twitter? No more social media during a federal election? Good onya devil.
God’s Bronson-esque kill count in the Old Testament versus the Biblical Personification of Evil, Satan. Please note that God’s kill count is 227,037% higher than Satan’s.
Yes, refer to Numbers 16 for God’s opinion on democracy.
One day Australians might just realise what a poltroon Morrison is.
Why are Christians in power such mean and nasty bastards? Is it a product of their delusion that they see the rest of us heathens as existing in the clutches of the ‘evil one’. Morrison colludes with the ‘evil one’ continuously. His name is Murdoch.