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2 - How Religion Constrains Law and the Idea of Choice

from SETTING THE SCENE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2013

Ngaire Naffine
Affiliation:
The University of Adelaide
Paul Babie
Affiliation:
University of Adelaide
Neville Rochow
Affiliation:
Howard Zelling Chambers in Adelaide, South Australia
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Summary

Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's.

Matthew: 22

In its broadest sense, this chapter is about the exercise of religious influence on and within law. Its focus is on the Christian religion and especially those parts of the Christian faithful that seek to influence law: who proselytise. Specifically, it concentrates on the ideas of the Roman Catholic Church. It considers the nature, the desirability and legitimacy of such influence, especially in the light of liberal Enlightenment principles that entail a commitment to human reason, equality and choice.

Inevitably, it begins with certain preoccupations, beliefs and presuppositions and with certain expectations. Always one needs a reason to engage with an intellectual enterprise and a set of triggering interests. Its particular interest is in the way religious believers declare their authority over some of the most fundamental human matters — life, sex and death — and seek to make law conform to their beliefs, and the degree of legal receptivity and susceptibility to these interventions. It is critical of such interventions, regarding them as constraining of human choice and against human interests, and tends to be critical of jurists who permit them. It is polemical in style: it seeks to kindle debate between the secular and the religious about the role religion does and should play in the shaping of laws, especially those that limit human choice in the most personal spheres of life.

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Chapter
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Publisher: The University of Adelaide Press
Print publication year: 2012

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