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Byline: Mike Elkin; With Tracy Mcnicoll In Paris
The Catholic Church was once central to Spanish life. But Spain is changing--just like its neighbors.
Three decades ago, just days after Spain's new post-Franco Constitution took effect, the new government promised the Vatican that despite an official separation of church and state it would continue Franco's old practice of financially assisting Spain's Roman Catholic Church until it could stand on its own. Spain is still paying. Through subsidies, exemptions and tax breaks, the government has paid the church an estimated [euro]5 billion per year to fund its schools, and for the upkeep of church property and Catholic facilities in prisons and hospitals.
But the Spanish government is now loosening the binds between the church and the state. Amid growing religious apathy nationwide, Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero in 2006 eliminated the church's exemption from paying the value-added tax, as well as the government's largely symbolic guarantee that it would cover any shortfall between what taxpayers donated to the church and the church's [euro]144 million budget that year. Now he is moving ahead with a series of distinctly secular projects, including introducing sexual-education classes in school and providing government funding for a free, over-the-counter morning-after contraception pill.
In some ways Zapatero's moves are emblematic of a shift around Western Europe. While Islam has become an increasingly large part of Europe's religious world, secularization is also on the rise among Christians. Governments are scrambling to deal with both trends, often by cutting state support for Christian churches, while extending support to other major religions on the premise that by supporting all religions, none enjoys official sanction. Germany, for instance, has long funded Christian-education classes in public schools, and is now extending that support to religious education for others, including Muslims.
In Britain, the government hasaalso introduced state funding foraMuslim-run schools, and there is a concurrent move to distance the government from the Church of England. Though the church still enjoys a powerful symbolic role and sponsors at least one in four state-funded elementary schools, its centrality is under challenge. For instance, the government has debated reforming a House of Lords system that now gives membership to 26 Church of England bishops and archbishops to the exclusion of other religious groups.
In Ireland, where church attendance has dropped by half over the past 25 years, dissenting voices toward traditional Catholic views on sex and marriage are on the rise, and the government is exploring how it might rein in the church's decision-making powers over public schools. The Norwegian government, after a lengthy debate on separating the official Lutheran Church from the state, will soon hand over to the church the power to appoint bishops. Previously the cabinet chose bishops, who, along with the rest of Norwegian clergy, are civil servants. In Greece, where the Orthodox Church is constitutionally linked to the state, church scandals ...
Source: HighBeam Research, The Closing Of The Church Door.(World Affairs)(church and state)