Politics and Religion: Should They Mix?

In Chrysostomโ€™s time, faith clashed with power. Remembering him today, we still ask: should politics and religion mix?

The Time of Saint John Chrysostom

John Chrysostom lived in the late 4th century, when the Roman Empire had already accepted Christianity. By then, religion and politics werenโ€™t just neighborsโ€”they were housemates. The Church was closely tied to the State, and bishops often found themselves dealing with emperors, empresses, and royal advisers.

Chrysostomโ€”โ€œGolden-Mouthedโ€ in Greek, not Johnโ€™s last name but a title given for his strong speakingโ€” became Archbishop of Constantinople (the empireโ€™s capital city). His sermons werenโ€™t just about the afterlife; they cut into the sins of the presentโ€”greed, pride, and corruption in high places. He spoke against wealth in the court while the poor suffered outside its gates. He called out bad behavior, even when it meant offending powerful people like Empress Eudoxia (wife of Emperor Arcadius, ruler of the Eastern Roman Empire).

And hereโ€™s the point: corruption existed then just as it does now. Riches, power, and comfort tempted leaders to forget fairness. Archbishop Chrysostom couldnโ€™t keep faith away from public life, because silence in the face of wrong would have been a betrayal of the Gospel. His role as shepherd of souls pushed him into the public spotlight, whether he wanted it or not.

In the end, he paid the priceโ€”sent away, mistreated, and left alone. But his courage left a legacy: a reminder that faith has a voice in society, not for powerโ€™s sake, but for truth.

As we remember Saint John Chrysostom on his memorial day, September 13, we see that the fight remains the same. The world is still marked by corruption. And maybe this is the answer: when religion is used for control, it should never mix with politics. But when it speaks against injustice and defends the poor, it cannot stay out. The question he faced is the same we ask today: should politics and religion mix?

๐šƒ๐šข๐š™๐š’๐š—๐š ๐™พ๐šž๐š ๐š˜๐š ๐š๐š‘๐šŽ ๐™ฑ๐š•๐šž๐šŽ โ€ข ๐–ฝ๐–บ๐—‹๐–พ๐—†.๐—†๐—Ž๐—Œ๐—‚๐–ผ.๐–ป๐—…๐—ˆ๐—€

Passaparola & Prayer 091325 Sat

God invites us to share in His joy when the lost are found and life is restored.

Share in the Joy

โ€œWe had to celebrate and rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.โ€ (Lk 15:32)

These words are a personal invitation that God offers to you and to all believers. He invites you to rejoice with Him, to celebrate and to share in His joy at the return of a sinner who was lost and has been found again.

Chiara Lubich
Word of Life โ€ข March 1980

โœ๏ธ Prayer to Share in the Joy

Lord Jesus, You rejoice when the lost return to You. Forgive us for the times we did not celebrate the good in others. Thank You for sharing Your Fatherโ€™s joy with us. Help us to welcome everyone with open hearts and live in the joy of Your mercy. Amen.

A prayer a day, keeps the soul from drifting away

๐šƒ๐šข๐š™๐š’๐š—๐š ๐™พ๐šž๐š ๐š˜๐š ๐š๐š‘๐šŽ ๐™ฑ๐š•๐šž๐šŽ โ€ข ๐–ฝ๐–บ๐—‹๐–พ๐—†.๐—†๐—Ž๐—Œ๐—‚๐–ผ.๐–ป๐—…๐—ˆ๐—€