There was a good article, "A religious test all our political candidates should take",  in last Sunday's Washington Post  about, essentially, religious bias or the potential for it in  politics.  The article noted that John F. Kennedy's famous speech about  his Catholicism helped to push  the view that a person's religious  beliefs are politically irrelevant.  However, this notion of religion  being a private matter changed at some point.  Politicians in the US,  it's very atypical elsewhere, I believe, wear their religion on their  sleeve and we've come to expect candidates for office to give us some  sort of "testimony".  An atheist would be very unlikely to gain office in the US, so the  US electorate expects politicians to embrace a traditional, from a US  perspective, religion and politicians like to use their religion to gain  political points.
The article contends that while it may be  tempting to go back to relegating religion to the private sector, that  that may not be prudent.  As a matter of fact, one's religion has  profound implications for one's views on morality, the government's role  in enforcing it,  and  authority.  So,  rather than letting the  candidates simply make pietistic feel good statements about his/her  religion, we need to be asking candidates how they would resolve  possible tensions between the dictates of their religion and their  church and their rights and responsibilities as leaders.  
I  would add, and perhaps it's implicitly stated in the  article, religion  has the further potential to have profound implications on a person's  views of ontology  and epistemology as well. In fact, if a person is  serious about his/her  religion it will have a profound effect on their  actions in the  political realms even when there is no explicit conflict  between church dogma and legislation.  For example, one's views on the  acceptability, or non-acceptability, of divine revelation as a  legitimate means of coming to have knowledge might affect one's views on  the breadth of the school curriculum.  One's interpretations of  Christ's demands to love one's enemies might affect one's perspective on  foreign policy and willingness to launch attacks.  Or the flip side  might be that one's views that all non-Christians (non-Muslims), are  doomed to hell and/or that this life is nothing but a painful precursor  to an eternity of bliss may also affect one's willingness to attack  another nation.  One's views that Christ's return to earth is imminent  might affect one's willingness to implement long term environmental  policy requiring short term pain.  If one's religion postulates a lower  role or traditional role for women, one might be less likely to pursue  Equality in the Workplace legislation.  So, not only should we concern  ourselves about explicit points of conflict but we should also try to  understand how religion might affect the politician's entire worldview  and the policies s/he might enforce.
Religious convictions are  convictions on matters that are of fundamental importance.  (In fact,  I'd contend that we all hold religious beliefs of some sort, insofar as  assumptions, even working assumptions,  about the nature of humankind,  whether we're alone in the universe, whether there's a higher power,  legitimate means of coming to knowledge, on the sorts of things that  exist, are all, in some sense religious beliefs, insofar as they're  profoundly important and usually embraced with a measure of faith. )  In  America, however, we've sort of come to the worst of all possible  worlds.  We don't ignore religion in political discourse, but we allow  it to operate only at the level of platitudes.  As the article suggests,  if religion really means something , let's ask hard questions about  what it means.  These fundamental convictions may very well mean  something important and candidates owe us an account of what they think  they mean when the rubber hits the road.  Now, I also think that for  very many politicians religion isn't operating at a profound  metaphysical level, their religious practice is more or less a social  activity and/or a comforting set of rites and rituals.  Nonetheless, if  that's the only role it's serving, candidates should  be clear about  that.
 

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