Tue, Jun 07, 2005 - Page 6 News List

Poll on role of religion in politics shows huge gap between the US and its allies

CHURCH AND STATE Only Mexico approached the US in its embrace of faith, and Americans are unique in believing that religious leaders should be politically active

AP , New York

Religious devotion sets the US apart from some of its closest allies. Americans profess unquestioning belief in God and support mixing faith and politics at much higher rates than people in other countries, AP-Ipsos polling found.

Respondents in Western Europe, where Pope Benedict XVI has complained that growing secularism has left churches unfilled on Sundays, were the least devout among the countries surveyed.

Only Mexicans come close to Americans in embracing faith among the 10 countries polled for The Associated Press by Ipsos. However, unlike Americans, Mexicans strongly object to clergy lobbying lawmakers, in line with Mexico's historic opposition to church influence.

"In the United States, you have an abundance of religions trying to motivate Americans to greater involvement," said Roger Finke, a sociologist at Penn State University. "It's one thing that makes a tremendous difference here."

The polling was conducted in May in the US, Australia, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, South Korea and Spain.

Nearly all US respondents said faith was important to them and only two percent said they did not believe in God. Almost 40 percent said religious leaders should try to sway policymakers, notably higher than in other countries.

"Our nation was founded on Judeo-Christian policies and religious leaders have an obligation to speak out on public policy, otherwise they're wimps," said David Black, a retiree from Osborne, Pennsylvania, who agreed to be interviewed after he was polled.

By contrast, 85 percent of French objected to clergy activism -- the strongest opposition of any nation surveyed. France has strict curbs on public religious expression and, according to the poll, one of the largest share of atheists: 19 percent. South Korea was the only other nation with such a high percentage of nonbelievers.

Australians were generally split over the importance of faith, while two-thirds of South Koreans and Canadians said religion was central to their lives. People in all three countries strongly opposed mixing religion and politics.

Researchers disagree over why people in the US have such a different religious outlook, said Brent Nelsen, an expert in politics and religion at Furman University in South Carolina.

Some say rejecting religion is a natural response to modernization and consider the US a strange exception to the trend. Others say Europe is the anomaly; people in modernized countries inevitably return to religion because they yearn for tradition, according to the theory. Some analysts, like Finke, use a business model. According to the theory, the long history of religious freedom in the US created a greater supply of worship options than in other countries, and that proliferation inspired wider observance. Some European countries still subsidize churches, in effect regulating or limiting religious options, Finke said.

History also is a factor.

Many of the countries other than the US have been through bloody religious conflict that contributes to their suspicion of giving clergy any say in policy.

Various factors contribute to a strong sense of separation of religion and government in those countries.

"In Germany, they have a Christian Democratic Party, and they talk about Christian values, but they don't talk about them in quite the same way that we do," Nelsen said.

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