Philippines President Duterte: 'If you are God, you don't create hell'

Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte has been criticized over his comments on God in the past but that hasn't stopped him from sounding off again, this time declaring that if there is a God, there should not be any hell, war or poverty.

According to the Manila Bulletin, the controversial figure said in a speech in Cebu City on Tuesday that while he believes in God, he has his 'own concept of God.' 

The God he believes in, he said, 'controls the universe.' He mused, 'We will be sucked to several of those black holes. And yet, we have been here on Earth for 4.5 billion years. There has to be a God.' 

But he admitted to his audience, 'I don't know how He works.'

In his speech, he questioned why God would create hell and how God could exist when there is poverty and war in the world.

'If you are God, you don't create hell. If you are God, you don't create wars. If there is a God, then there is no poverty. If there is God, then nobody dies of hunger. If there is God, you are not refused burial services on Sundays,' he said.

Duterte, a former Catholic who claims he left the faith after being sexually abused by a priest when he was younger, has previously courted controversy for his comments on God.

When the Catholic Church criticized the brutality of his war on drugs, the Philippines president responded by calling God 'stupid.'

The comments appeared to have a knock-on effect on his approval ratings, which fell in July to their lowest since his election in 2016.

Aries Arugay, a political-science professor at the University of the Philippines Diliman, told the Washington Post: 'It's one thing that Duterte attacks the church; it's another thing that he attacks God himself.

'The church's power and political influence might have been in decline; however, that doesn't mean that Filipinos are not religious and spiritual anymore.' 

News
New Edinburgh memorial honours mission school matron killed in Auschwitz
New Edinburgh memorial honours mission school matron killed in Auschwitz

A brass plaque has been laid in honour of a Church of Scotland school matron who died in Auschwitz during the Second World War.

Jordan raising $100M for construction of first century village ahead of 2,000th anniversary of Jesus’ baptism
Jordan raising $100M for construction of first century village ahead of 2,000th anniversary of Jesus’ baptism

The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan — named after the Jordan River and ruled by pro-Western King Abdullah II — is organizing a major global celebration marking the 2,000th anniversary of Christ’s baptism.

Pro-life group: end of two-child benefit cap will save more unborn babies from abortion
Pro-life group: end of two-child benefit cap will save more unborn babies from abortion

The benefits cap may have been a factor in some women's decisions to have an abortion.

Spotlight falls on discrimination against Christians in Turkey as Pope visits
Spotlight falls on discrimination against Christians in Turkey as Pope visits

A report by the European Centre for Law and Justice documents the continuing difficulties faced by Turkey’s Christian minority.