Provincial governments (and the national government [?]) have a lot more ability to regulate religion in your country than in ours. Here, any splinter group believing almost anything is as valid as the believers in it think it to be, and governments don't generally take sides unless there are property disputes or something like that. They certainly do not make clergy register with the government in order to marry people, act as chaplains to public entities, and etc.
I still do not think I am understanding what you mean here - I do not see the government here having much ability at all to do what you are saying. Could you give an example.
Also, i know in at least some US states religious officials need to register or some such with government in order to perform legal marriages, and I am pretty sure public institutions like hospitals and universities have some way to assess and keep track of chaplains working in their facilities. All of which is pretty similar to what happens here. I cant go to the US and say I am a minister of religion and then perform marriages with legal standing without any sort of proof r documentation for the state.
Now, that's a toughie. I doesn't appear to be because there are more Buddhists, Wiccans, etc. than in earlier times. If some sort of diversity is the key, it would be the rise of a militant atheism that has in mind neutralizing religion through the courts. Almost everything around here is being settled more and more by litigation, and these folks seem to think that this is the way to success rather than just by use of the pen as was the case in earlier times.
Well, you see that if I'd read ahead instead of answering paragraph by paragraph, I'd have found that you and I are basically on the same page already.
Yes, I think it is not pluralism itself so much as non-religious philosophical positions being mistaken for neutral worldviews.
Alas, that is the way our county has historically approached it--and it's enshrined in our laws. However, the courts are disregarding the precedent and the written law now in favor of more and more exaggerated notions of "equality."
So would you say that the idea that the state cannot do things like fund anything tied to religion, like a religious school, is a really new thing. To me it seems more like the outgrowth of the principles as they were set out, though perhaps not the intention of those who framed them. So that may suggest a problem with the way the principles were expressed or the system for using them.
I have thought at times, not particularly in relation to this, that one real advantage of a common law approach to laws as opposed to a constitutional or first principles approach may be that it is less likely be understood in a way that they were not intended, and is more flexible to changing needs. Trying to write a constitution that will really be adequate without saying too much, for all time, may actually be beyond what is really possible for human beings.
I am not sure that I would use the word equality, though I understand what you are getting at. Why, after all, is it more equal if every public school is secular, rather than all religious schools having the option of public funding. You could equally say it is less equal.
So I tend to think the desire for equality is not really the issue - it is the idea that it is possible to have religion exist only at the level of the individual, while all institutions with a relation to the state can be truly secular and neutral without a worldview. I think the idea with this is that it would be the individuals who would serve as the link between public institutions and worldview - as members of the institution they would all bring their worldviews into the institution.
But it has not necesarily worked as one might hope. It seems like it is not enough to say that students or voters can bring their religious views into the instiution but the representatives like teachers or professors or lawmakers or civil servants may not bring theirs. It just is not possible to teach, or make curricula, or laws, etc. without reference to a worldview.