INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS AND CULTURAL PRACTICE (IJRCP )

E-ISSN 2579-0501
P-ISSN 2695-219X
VOL. 8 NO. 3 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.56201/ijrcp.v8.no3.2023.pg56.67


Religious Freedom and Democracy

Reuben Olukayode BABATUNDE, PhD , Adebayo Ola AFOLARANMI, PhD and Professor Donald A. ODELEYE


Abstract


A convention of democracy is that government should promote the common good. Citizens’ common good is based on their shared civil interests, including the security of themselves and their possessions, equal basic liberties, diverse opportunities, and an adequate social minimum. Citizens’ civil interests ground what John Rawls calls “the political values of justice and public reason.” These political values determine the political legitimacy of laws and the political constitution and provide the proper bases for voting, public discussion, and political justification. These political values similarly provide the terms to properly understand the separation of church and state, freedom of conscience, and free exercise of religion. It is not the proper role of government to promote religious doctrines or practices or to enforce moral requirements of religion. For government to enforce or even endorse the imperatives or ends of religion violates individuals’ freedom and equality: it encroaches upon their liberty of conscience and freedom to pursue their conceptions of the good; impairs their equal civic status; and undermines their equal political rights as free and equal citizens.


keywords:

religious freedom, democracy, citizens’ common good, political values, political rights




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