Wednesday, 8 May 2019

Folau Religious Expression – Implications for Work Participation


Folau’s widely reported breach of Australia Rugby Code of Conduct and threat of a job loss for quoting bible verses on his social media contrary to his employer and sponsor wishes bring into focus tensions between religious faith and practices, and the new Australian cultural turn – where these are said to intersect with the world of work.

The Folau-Rugby Australia dispute points to far-reaching work participation implications beyond this particular Wallabies superstar.

This star re-sparked the controversy by expressing personal faith views about the passage of the Tasmanian State Parliament new laws making it optional for birth certificate registration to include gender – it is no longer compulsory for new-borns to be identified as male or female in Tassie.

This Tasmanian State law also allows 16+ year olds to change their previously registered gender without parents’ consent as per media reports see this links.

So what did he say to make some people take offense? Folau who we are told is also a preacher remarked on Instagram that “Drunks, homosexuals, adulterers, liars, fornicators, thieves, atheists, idolaters, hell awaits you. Repent! Only Jesus saves.” If you Google you will see the verse is taken from 1 Cor 6:9. Here is the bible link.

Work participation is crucial for each person’s existence, survival and actualization of potential regardless of your faith, ethnicity, sexual identity, disability, and so forth. That’s how in the past we have understood the workings of Australian pluralist society.

But Australia is experiencing a cultural turn as shown in 61.6% who voted in favour of Same Sex Marriage contrasted with 38.4% who disapproved.

But does this mean the 38.4% or more are not allowed to comment on any flow-on effects of SSM legislative reforms such as registration certificates for newly-born or the 16 year olds in their social media communities or church?

Social media such as Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are significant spaces where community of believers conduct practices that support maintenance and growth of their faiths, aside from physical spaces. I presume they share info, discuss things of faith, and explore different ways of applying their faith and beliefs to everyday life.

These days in many churches preaching is not simply done by those with the mantle of a professional preacher. Neither should it be. There are many lay preachers who hold other jobs in other parts of secular society.

Following the ‘high-level breach’ verdict made by the Independent Panel against Folau, can we expect to see more people prevented from quoting various bible verses and risking losing their job with other employers?

Is there a danger of instilling totalitarian tendencies in how Australia thinks community of everyday believers are now to be governed and regulated to make them apparently fit the post-modernist and ‘post-faith’ society?

Obviously we can find many biblical verses on the gospel of ‘grace’, ‘love’, or on ‘not bruising a broken reed’. But I think for Christian commentators unless you are speaking from a position of spiritual revelation I don’t think many of us are in a position to say which verse would have been better used by Folau to make his criticism about birth certificate reforms.

It seems to me as Australia gradually shifts from pluralist democracy to identity politics as an underpinning of its governance system, new challenges are inevitable because two different sets of rights and belief systems are now at odds on some key areas. These points of contention are becoming more evident as time goes by.

In my view, there is more to this than simply whether those of us who profess to be Christians agree, disagree or are uneasy about how Folau made his point. It is no secret that many other reforms are in play across Australian jurisdictions reportedly as a way of aligning with the federal SSM changes. It just happens that this time the risk to work participation is highlighted in the Folau-Rugby Australia dispute.

In the past under Australia’s Equal Opportunity policies many people used to broadly think of access and equity in terms of ensuring people were not barred from safely participating in employment, service access and various public opportunities on basis of gender, religion, sexuality, disability, race and such. The new cultural turn involving identity politics seem to be suggesting that people can only contribute to the ‘nature of a good society’ by recanting some their Christian beliefs.

If we are to be honest, perhaps a decade before SSM was legalised in Australia, a few mainstream public institutions and non-government entities were already screening for some employment positions in favour of staff that can support greater acceptance of diverse sexualities and gender identities – and promote supportive environments for such groups.

Some notable employer websites already expect conformity with values and visions that require employees who can positively promote and celebrate the spirit of diverse gender and sexual identities. How many of these requirements are key to duties at hand, I wouldn’t know. Is it all legal or inclusive, I don’t know. In what way this aligns or conflicts with existing Australia’s EEO laws or the Article 18 of the UN Declaration of Human Rights? There is a fair bit to flesh out.

In my view I think there many issues that federal Parliament did not deal with prior to SSM legalisation or after about religious protections. The Ruddock Review Report got eventually released but in all honesty, given the state of politics, perhaps the timing was never conducive in sorting out religious protections legislatively.

Where to from here on the employment front? Whatever sanctions or settlement Rugby Australia reaches with Folau, there are emerging issues for Christians in private or public social media spaces they can expect to face. Even if you are the sort that uses the discourse of ‘grace’, will you constantly self-censor yourself just in case a discussion you are having with your social media tribe veers on when God brings the ’age of grace/dispensation to end’, or ‘that every human being is a sinner in need of cleansing and renewal’, or your tribes’ chats on ’redemption’ or ‘repentance from idolatry of our digital gadgets or money…. ’ (just some examples).

Do you abandon social media involving your local community, faith networks or whatever for fear of losing future job opportunities? Do you quit acknowledging that you are Christian in public forum for fear of being misunderstood or targeted within context or out of context?

Also, now that the overarching federal SSM legislation is in place, we could be seeing intensification of these sorts of employment dispute in the future unless religious protections are put in place. If you assume that 38.4% of the voting population did not support the SSM vote, and also a few more who supported assumed flow-on effects will not occur – then I think the Folau case is one of a few more others to come beyond the sports field.

In the near future, the Federal Parliament may be forced to adjudicate whether they believe employment in public and non-public institutions must demand that bible verses deemed offensive by some must not be used by Christians who seek to participate in such work life. Good luck to them how they sort this one out. Personally I think the UN did a better job in balancing everyone’s rights with Article 18.

As things stand, I think we will continue to see some individual organisations doing their own thing, and those aspiring to succeed playing greater part in celebrating and promoting diversity in gender and sexual identities. Whether this then means bible believers can expect reduced opportunities is something to watch.

On things community, it disturbing to think some of the Pacific Islander communities could have their participation into Rugby as community, elite sport and associated income possibly under threat because they share bible verses in church and social media spaces with their community folk and interested parties.

If mainstream society decides to sanction these groups, how long before you impact social cohesion?  It sounds to me that the wisdom of pluralism is going out of the window.

Pluralism assumes existence of groups with diverse and even competing interests. When you govern with some pluralist thinking in mind you know a way of governing partly and inevitably requires managing competing interests in while promoting a common good.

In a previous article I suggested Australia was at cross-roads when discussing the contestation around education and parental rights following SSM federal legislation. Today the Folau-Australia Rugby dispute puts a spotlight on risk to work participation. Some will say it’s not like our Parliaments didn’t know at some point they will have to grapple with these issues. It is also possible, who knows, perhaps the courts are gonna get busy.

The Gospel is clear about extending dignity to each other as human race and all born in the image of God. There is so much we have in common than what divides us. Pray for wisdom for those who lead us: See this verse.