Re: Kevin Rudd
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Re: Kevin Rudd         

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile
Author: bigfletch8
Date: Aug 19, 2008 17:39

On Aug 20, 2:34 am, turtoni fastmail.net> wrote:
> "Rudd and his family attend the Anglican church of St John the Baptist
> in Bulimba in his electorate. Although raised a Roman Catholic, Rudd
> began attending Anglican services in the 1980s with his wife. Like
> John Howard, Rudd has addressed congregations of the Hillsong Church.
>
> Rudd is the mainstay of the parliamentary prayer group in Parliament
> House, Canberra. He is vocal about his Christianity and has given a
> number of prominent interviews to the Australian religious press on
> the topic. Rudd has defended church representatives engaging with
> policy debates, particularly with respect to WorkChoices legislation,
> climate change, global poverty, therapeutic cloning and asylum
> seekers. In an essay in The Monthly, Rudd writes:
>
> A Christian perspective on contemporary policy debates may not
> prevail. It must nonetheless be argued. And once heard, it must be
> weighed, together with other arguments from different philosophical
> traditions, in a fully contestable secular polity. A Christian
> perspective, informed by a social gospel or Christian socialist
> tradition, should not be rejected contemptuously by secular
> politicians as if these views are an unwelcome intrusion into the
> political sphere. If the churches are barred from participating in the
> great debates about the values that ultimately underpin our society,
> our economy and our polity, then we have reached a very strange place
> indeed.
>
> He cites Dietrich Bonhoeffer as a personal inspiration in this regard.
>
> In late January 2007, Tony Abbott - a former seminarian and federal
> minister for health under the coalition government - criticised Rudd's
> use of Christianity in Australian politics,[ contrasting Rudd's public
> appeal to Christian values with his voting record on issues such as
> the introduction of the abortion-inducing drug RU486.
>
> Rudd is opposed to same-sex marriage:
>
> I have a pretty basic view on this, as reflected in the position
> adopted by our party, and that is, that marriage is between a man and
> a woman"
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Rudd

And Bob Hawke, the most popular PM? (same party as Rudd to our US
readers). He was a professed atheist and had a known history of
alchohol abuse.
His father was a clergyman, which is one of the reasons he took the
atheistic perspective no doubt.

It couldnt happen in the US (although he was very popular in the US,
particularly with Reagan).

BOfL
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