Nigeria is deeply religious, but dangerously divided over religion in politics. With over 90 million Christians and nearly 100 million Muslims, questions of fairness and inclusion dominate governance debates. Should religion shape public policy?
Arguments For
1. Religious values like honesty, service, and sacrifice can elevate governance quality.
2. Religious leaders mobilize grassroots support better than politicians.
3. Faith provides moral compass for policy-making.
Arguments Against
1. Mixing religion and governance risks alienation.
2. It fuels identity politics, deepening ethnic and sectarian divides.
3. Secular governance ensures fairness for all, regardless of faith.
The Middle Ground
Religion should inspire leaders personally, but not dictate policy nationally. Nigeria’s constitution provides secular balance. Citizens must insist leaders serve all Nigerians, not just their faith communities.
Final Reflection
The real question is not whether religion should influence governance — it already does. The real task is ensuring that influence drives compassion, not conflict.
Word count: ~1020