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Faith & Public Life

Faith commitments – each person’s deepest commitments, whether formally religious in nature or not – shape how each person interacts with our neighbours, our institutions, and our environment. CPJ is convinced that Canada needs to engage in serious reflection on core values and faith perspectives and their implications for our public life together – the common good. Without such a debate, the public sphere will continue to be a place for individuals or groups to advance only their own particular interests rather than come to meaningful consensus on how to address important public issues.

One of the key components of a person’s and a community’s identity is the deepest convictions they hold which shape their private, but also their public life. Faith shapes the most basic questions of identity: Who am I? How did I get here? What is wrong in the world? How can it be fixed? The faith perspectives of Canadians, whether Aboriginal, Muslim, Jew, Christian, Hindu, Sikh or Humanist, shape how they participate as citizens in building and shaping a cohesive and inclusive Canadian society.

Some have argued that people must deny their religion, ethnicity, and culture to participate fully in Canadian life. Some have a deep distrust of religion and a tendency to regard public life as distinctly secular – having no room for faith perspectives. CPJ believes that differing faith convictions should be acknowledged as key elements of how individuals and communities can best contribute to the common good. Learning how to do that in a multi-cultural and multi-faith society is crucial to the common good.

God(s) in the house: From faith to hopeful citizenship

Recent articles in the popular press have questioned the validity of a faith-based approach to politics. And for good reason, some approaches are not so helpful to the common good. In our recent Winter Catalyst, Harry Kits suggests, “The real question of faith and politics is… how people of faith can contribute to a hopeful citizenship.” Read more »

A CPJ take on pluralism

Executive Director Harry Kits reflects on CPJ's approach to pluralism, from its founding principles to its coalitions' work today. Read more »

In Diversity with Faith, Coming Together for Justice

Harry J. Kits, Executive Director, CPJ and PJRC. Read more »

Public Justice, Then and Now and Into the Future

3 Panelists: Jim Visser, Kathy Vandergrift, and Janet Wesselius, Edmonton, May 29, 2004. Read more »

Silence is Not Always Golden

A 40th Anniversary Reflection by Mayan Francis, Director and CEO, Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission, Halifax, March 6, 2004. Read more »

The 1980s: a big appetite for faith-fed advocacy

The third article in a series of decade-by-decade reviews of the first 40 years of CPJ. Read more »

Kyoto is a religion

It requires a faith response. By Harry Spaling. Read more »

From a Public Justice perspective

The art of James Patterson helps two organizations define their mission. Read more »

The 10 percent solution

“Stewardship Sunday” in many churches is the day we talk about our giving. In the church where I grew up this meant filling out our “faith promise” pledges for our annual giving. A giant, gradually reddening thermometer-graph tracked our pledges against the proposed church budget for the year. Read more »

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