Culture Vs Religion

There seems to be a lot of confusion in people’s minds between the concept of culture and religion.

When faced with the decision whether to allow certain modes of dress it can be difficult as in this case. There are the two extremes, we must allow religious freedom regardless, to the opposite position, they must conform to the society in which they find themselves. Obviously most of us would be a little more flexible but where does the balance lie?

First let me dispel a myth, this has little to do with religious freedom. In essence if you look at the fundamentals of religion it is more about the heart than the outward signs. In most instances the outward signs are added by men after the event. Religion begins and ends in the heart so that if you strip all the externals away what is left is the true religion of the person. The external trappings are more to do with culture.
Look at Christianity for instance. Most of the practices vary from culture to culture. Head covering, building structure, priestly garments, beards, sabath, etc etc. All of these are cultural and nothing to do with the heart which is where true religion lies.

The same thing occurs with Moslems. There are many quite diverse practices and these are really nothing much to do with the Moslem religion – they arose due to cultural differences.

So the question changes from religious freedom to cultural freedom. You see we all have religious freedom, that is entirely unfettered. In fact whatever external influences come to bear we can believe what we wish. That is why Christianity prospered under communism. But cultural freedom is an entirely different question.

But a question for another day.

How not to mark a significant occasion

There has been a lot of build up to, and hype associated with the “Sorry” speech that was given today by the Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. Aborigines were flown in from all over Australia to mark the occasion. News and TV services ran live to cover the event. Much discussion and debate has occurred regarding the content and significance. So what do we get for our money?

Apparently the speech – read the entire speech here – was written by Rudd himself. After his acceptance speech I would have thought that someone would have given him some good advice, like “Do not wrote your own speeches”. No don’t get me wrong, I applaud the sentiment and I feel that Rudd will probably be a good leader, but really, he does need some good speech writers.

This is a very ordinary piece of work. Such an occasion calls for vision and statesmanship but all we got was some hack phrases and clichés. I never ceased to be unimpressed with Rudd’s ineptitude when it comes to the English language. I admit, I am not Churchill, nor am I prime minister. I suspect that Rudd may have joined the Bush school of speech writing.