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Home Letters

Of Pulpits and Politics: When Praise Undermines Principle

Admin by Admin
April 4, 2026
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Dear Editor,

In Guyana’s evolving democracy, moments like the one at the opening of the Seventh-day Adventist Caribbean Union Conference Regional Camporee deserve more than casual applause — they call for civic scrutiny. Pastor Exton Clarke’s effusive praise of President Irfaan Ali, laced with references to divine virtue and visionary leadership, may play well to an audience seeking affirmation, but it raises uncomfortable questions about where the boundary lies between the sacred and the secular.

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That boundary, etched clearly in the Constitution, protects freedom of religion and prevents the state from entangling itself in religious affairs. When a cleric publicly decorates a sitting Head of State with spiritual language and elevates him to the pulpit — a space reserved for the ministry of faith, not the machinery of governance — the optics blur those protections. It isn’t merely a lapse of etiquette; it strikes at the very principle of separation that preserves the sanctity of both institutions.

What is especially troubling is the President’s own posture during this event. His ascent to the pulpit, a sacred seat consecrated for clergy, betrayed not reverence but presumption. It was a moment devoid of intellectual awareness or moral restraint — an act steeped in the arrogance of authority and the audacity of self-importance. For a Head of State to stand where ministers of the Gospel are meant to serve is not simply a breach of protocol; it is an affront to the moral sanctity of the church and a display of crass disregard for its spiritual office. True leadership calls for humility before God, not domination of His altar.

The Pastor’s invocation of state-sponsored works — road repairs, land clearing, creek excavation — as grounds for religious praise only compounds the problem. These are matters of governance, funded from the public purse, not divine favours deserving of exaltation. To frame such acts as spiritual gifts distorts the civic relationship between citizens and their government, recasting service delivery into sacred patronage.

This episode underscores a deeper crisis — when the trappings of power deceive even spiritual leaders into confusing moral leadership with political favour. Freedom of conscience and worship in Guyana exist independent of presidential benevolence; they are anchored in constitutional right. Clergy must remember that their loyalty lies first with conscience and congregation, not with political convenience.

The President’s intrusion upon the pulpit, and the pastor’s indulgent blessing of it, together represent a dangerous erosion of boundaries. What citizens witnessed was not an episode of unity, but of impropriety — a moment when civics bowed to ceremony, and the sanctity of faith yielded to the vanity of political spectacle.

In these times, Guyana needs watchful citizens and courageous voices to remind leaders — both of state and of church — that respect for institutions is not ornamental. It is the bedrock of democracy and the measure of true integrity.

Yours truly,
Hemdutt Kumar

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