While I've previously commented on the illiberal nature of some of Helen Zille's recent public utterances, at least she's mostly kept her personal religious beliefs out of the equation. Sure, they no doubt inform her conservative moral stance, but her arguments and proposed interventions are nevertheless supported by arguments (regardless of your, or my, views on the quality of those arguments).
By contrast, Jack Bloom (DA Leader in the Gauteng legislature) seems to have no qualms in putting God at front and centre as a potential answer to South Africa's ills, regardless of the diversity of belief among those who voted for his party (not to mention a large number of those who work for his party).
In fact, God seems to have been here all along, not only facilitating the "transition from Apartheid", but also working abroad in spurring the abolitionist movement against slavery, and inspiring people to formulate the "democratic concepts that led to the American Revolution".
There's no question that Bloom is sincere, and that he believes religion can play a role in encouraging people to think about their moral obligations. Sadly for those of us who think morality can only be principled if also secular, he's in agreement with the DA's general position here, where the party says that religion "should serve as a moral and spiritual inspiration".
But even this view (the mistaken one, that morality and religion are easy bedfellows) is at least comprehensible, given that our country is mostly religious. Comprehensible, not reasonable, because if we need more prayer and less politics (as Bloom argues), surely the ACDP would have a far higher share of the votes?
What's most egregious about Bloom's opinion piece is that he by and large simply makes things up as he goes along, plucking historical events out of the timeline and - without any evidence (unless you count dubious correlations as evidence, which you shouldn't) - attributes them to prayer and religion. It's true that Lanphier drove a large Christian revival movement in the US during the mid-1800′s, yes, but to say that it was the Christianity - rather than basic human compassion - that informed the abolition of slavery is an entirely circular argument, which assumes what it purports to demonstrate.