The General Election is over. Congratulations to the 41 people who have been elected to serve in T&T’s Parliament. I pray that each one of you will strive to represent your respective constituency honestly and collaborate with others to build a just, inclusive, vibrant nation.
Each elected Representative will bring to the table his/her beliefs and values. Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. Section 4 (h) of T&T’s Constitution provides for freedom of conscience and religious belief and practice, including worship. It prohibits discrimination based on religion. Individuals have a right to hold both religious and non-religious beliefs.
Years ago, I read Miroslav Volf’s book entitled, A Public Faith: How Followers of Christ Should Serve the Common Good. Inter alia, he said: “To live with integrity, it is important to know what’s right and what’s wrong, to be educated morally. However, merely KNOWING is not enough. Virtuous character matters more than moral knowledge. The reason is simple: like the self-confessing apostle Paul in Romans 7, most of those who do wrong know what’s right but find themselves irresistibly attracted to its opposite. Faith idles when character shrivels.”
I am in London at the moment. Recently, MP Stephen Pounds, former Labour MP for Ealing, and Vice President of the Catholic Union, participated in a Pub Talk reflecting on the importance of faith in one’s public life. Inter alia, he said: “People may change but faith does not. We must not commodify life, rather we need to follow Catholic Social Teaching and, when we leap, we must ensure that our faith is not left behind.”
We live in a multi-faith society and one in which there are people who, although they have no religious beliefs, have a wide variety of beliefs, values and ways of looking at the world. Remember this when taking the Oath of Office to sit in Parliament, the Legislative Branch of T&T. Besides the President of TT, the House of Representatives is composed of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, 41 elected MPs and 31 Senators. You must all find a way of working collaboratively to build the common good; a nation in which justice, peace, and love can prevail.
In our bicameral Parliament, the 31 Senate members who will be appointed by the President will comprise: 16 Government Senators appointed on the advice of the Prime Minister, 6 Opposition Senators appointed on the advice of the Leader of the Opposition and 9 Independent Senators appointed by the President to represent other sectors of civil society.
Each of you will bring your faith/beliefs/values to the work in hand. Remember the words of Tertullian, an early Christian theologian, polemicist, and moralist, who said: “You can judge the quality of their faith from the way they behave. Discipline is an index to doctrine.” You have been elected/appointed to SERVE. Rachel Wells’ 2024 article in Forbes outlines 5 key values, behaviours, and qualities that characterize servant leaders - empathy, humility, selflessness, vision and empowerment. These qualities are needed if you are to use the nation’s limited resources responsibly/equitably.
Pope Francis, whose words constantly remind me of the link between my faith and the way in which I live my life said: “If a thought or a desire leads you on the road of humility, of self-abasement and of service to others, it is of Jesus; but if it leads you on the road of self-importance, of vanity and of pride, or on the road of abstract thought, it is not of Jesus.”
Here in the UK, 650 members of Parliament were elected to the House of Commons – one for each parliamentary constituency, in the 2024 general election. Humanists UK have observed, in 2024 the UK elected “the most openly non-religious House of Commons in history, with roughly 40% of MPs during their swearing-in ceremony choosing to take the secular affirmation instead of a religious oath to God, up from 24% after the 2019 election...about a dozen are thought to choose it because their religious beliefs prohibit oaths.”
But remember, an inclusive nation includes those who are non-religious. Nation-building requires all hands on deck. The challenge will always be to find common ground/values.
As you, our own elected/appointed citizens take up your positions in T&T’s Parliament, remember that while we will be willing to work with you to promote sustainable development during these challenging times, we look to you to demonstrate good governance which is participatory, consensus oriented, accountable, transparent, responsive, effective and efficient, equitable and inclusive and which follows the rule of law.