Church raps Austria's far-right presidential candidate for invoking God

 Reuters

Austria's Protestant church has criticized the far-right candidate for president for using the phrase "so help me God" on his campaign posters, saying his party's anti-immigrant stance ran against Christian principles.

Norbert Hofer, the anti-immigrant Freedom Party's (FPO) presidential hopeful, uses the line in the hope it will help persuade voters to make him the European Union's first far-right head of state in a run-off election on Dec. 4.

The result of a previous run-off in May, which the 45-year-old eurosceptic narrowly lost to former Green Party leader Alexander Van der Bellen, 72, was annulled due to irregularities in counting postal ballots.

Hofer is a former Catholic turned Protestant who has said he would not swear in a female minister wearing an Islamic headscarf.

"God cannot be instrumentalised for one's own intentions or for political purposes," the three branches of the Protestant churches in the Alpine republic said in a joint statement.

Austria is a traditionally Christian country where two-thirds of the 8.7 million population are professed Catholics and about four per cent are Protestant.

While a spokesman for the Austrian Bishops' Conference – the highest body of the Catholic church – said the church would not comment on Hofer's campaign, the Protestant church said Hofer had misused Christianity for narrow political ends.

"We do not get involved in party politics, but if Christian principles are violated we have to take a...stand," said Thomas Hennefeld, superintendent of the Protestant Reformed Church.

Hofer's direct invocation of God for political purposes was the first of its kind in Austria for 10-15 years and was inappropriate given the FPO's politics, Hennefeld said.

"We stand for a Biblical understanding of God, a universal God who is there for the weak, the strangers, the refugees – the opposite of what the FPO stands for."

Austria has taken in over 115,000 migrants from the Middle East, Africa and Asia since last year. After initially welcoming the refugees, more and more Austrians fear it will be difficult to integrate the newcomers and have become receptive to the FPO's message that mass immigration threatens security and jobs.

FPO head Heinz-Christian Strache dismissed the Protestant churches' criticism, arguing that "so help me God" was also part of the presidential swearing-in vow.

"I simply cannot understand how it is necessary to justify oneself when it comes to one's core values," Strache said.

News
What would the late Sir Ken Morrison have made of the 'Progress Pride' sign in his store?
What would the late Sir Ken Morrison have made of the 'Progress Pride' sign in his store?

I shudder to think what he would have made of Morrisons’ capitulation to a political ideology.

RE council recommends new framework to end historic neglect of the subject
RE council recommends new framework to end historic neglect of the subject

Many schools are flouting the requirement to teach RE to year 11s.

Women for Scotland criticise CoE diocese's 'LGBTQIA+ Chaplaincy'
Women for Scotland criticise CoE diocese's 'LGBTQIA+ Chaplaincy'

Oxford Diocese said it simply wished to provide pastoral care, not take sides in a debate

Justin Welby says resignation was 'loneliest' moment
Justin Welby says resignation was 'loneliest' moment

Former Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has said his resignation last year was the correct decision, despite it being “one of the loneliest moments I’ve ever had”.