Generous Religious Freedom Laws Empower Religious Good Works, Elder Soares Says at Brazil Conference Religious freedom is the foundation of living together in justice and peace, a Latter-day Saint apostle said this week at a religious liberty symposium in Brasília, Brazil. “The more generous religious freedom laws are, the more broadly religion is empowered to perform good works. This partnership between religion and society engenders more peace,” said Elder Ulisses Soares, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Church leaders have emphasized both religious freedom and peace recently. Elder Soares made his remarks during the Second Brazilian Symposium on Religious Freedom. The event was organized by BYU’s International Center for Law and Religion Studies and the Brazilian Center for Studies in Law and Religion. Elder Soares spoke at the inaugural symposium in Rio de Janeiro last year. Elder Soares quoted a Yale legal scholar during his presentation on Tuesday. “Only religion possesses the majesty, the power, and the sacred language to teach all of us, the religious and the secular, the genuine appreciation for each other on which a successful civility must rest,” Yale’s Stephen L. Carter wrote. Elder Soares said religion provides important underpinnings for living together in differences. “As we live our lives in places where people range from Catholic to Pentecostal, atheist to fundamentalist, introvert to missionary, how should we act? By permitting so many expressions of belief, religious freedom may magnify the discomfort of difference. But it also enhances our best human impulses. It frees us up to do good things,” he said. He added, “When it comes to relating to people of other faiths or no faith at all, religion lifts us out of our selfish desires. The gospel of Jesus Christ teaches me to be answerable to God, to my fellow beings, and to myself.” Elder Soares also spoke with many of the hundreds of journalists who attended the media open house for the Brasília Brazil Temple last week. And he spoke to church members in Maceio, Brazil, telling them, “God did not send us here to fail.” |