Daftar Pastor yang masuk politik
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Daftar Pastor yang masuk politik
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Christian_pastors_in_politics
Anglican
- John Bani – President and head of state of Vanuatu from 25 March 1999 until 24 March 2004; Anglican priest
- Timothy Beaumont, Baron Beaumont of Whitley – UK politician; only member of the House of Lords to sit as a member of the Green Party; Anglican priest
- Walter Lini – founding Prime Minister of Vanuatu (succeeded by Bani); Anglican priest
Baptist
- Benny M. Abante – former two-termed Congressman of the Philippines; awarded as Most Outstanding Congressmen of Philippines in the 13th and 14th Congresses; founder and pastor of Metropolitan Bible Baptist Church in the Philippines
- William Aberhart – founder of the Social Credit Party of Alberta
- Chuck Baldwin – United States Constitution Party activist and Baptist pastor
- Ross Clifford – Australian politician; New South Wales Legislative Council and Australian Senate candidate; Baptist theologian
- Thomas Clement "Tommy" Douglas – Canadian social democratic politician and Baptist minister; elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1935 as a member of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF); became the Saskatchewan CCF's leader, then the seventh Premier of Saskatchewan, 1944-1961
- Walter E. Fauntroy – former member of United States Congress and Baptist pastor
- Ernie Fletcher – Governor of Kentucky, 2003–2007
- William H. Gray – former Congressman and minister
- Benjamin Hooks – American civil rights leader and Baptist minister
- Mike Huckabee – former governor of Arkansas and Baptist minister
- Tim Hutchinson – former Senator from Arkansas and former Baptist pastor
- Jesse Jackson – civil rights activist and Baptist minister
- Martin Luther King – civil rights activist and Baptist minister
- Ron Lewis – retiring Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from Kentucky since 1994; Baptist minister
- Pat Robertson – Republican supporter, former United States presidential nomination candidate, and former Baptist pastor
Roman Catholicism
- Barthélemy Boganda
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide – former President of Haiti; former Catholic priest
- Ernesto Cardenal – former Minister for Culture for Nicaragua and Catholic priest
- James Renshaw Cox – US Presidency candidate and Catholic priest
- Robert Drinan – Roman Catholic Jesuit priest, lawyer, human rights activist, and Democratic US Representative from Massachusetts
- Ivan Grubišić – Roman Catholic priest, sociologist, and independent representative in the Croatian Parliament
- Andrej Hlinka – Slovak public activist and Catholic priest
- Theodor Innitzer (later Cardinal Innitzer) – Austrian Minister of Social Administration (1929–1930)
- Ludwig Kaas – prominent German politician during Weimar Republic and Catholic priest
- Hugo Kołłątaj – Polish social and political activist, political thinker, historian, philosopher and Catholic priest
- Fernando Arturo de Meriño – President of the Dominican Republic (1880–1882)
- Mihovil Pavlinović – Roman Catholic priest, writer, and People's Party representative in the Diet of Dalmatia, Croatian Parliament and Austro-Hungarian Imperial Council
- Gabriel Richard – French Roman Catholic priest who became a delegate from Michigan Territory to the US House of Representatives
- Ignaz Seipel – Chancellor of Austria for two stints during the 1920s
- Stanisław Staszic – Polish priest, philosopher, statesman, geologist, scholar, poet and writer; a leader of the Polish Enlightenment; famous for works related to the "Great" or "Four-Year Sejm" (1788–1792) and its Constitution of 3 May 1791
- Luigi Sturzo – one of the founders of the Italian People's Party; Catholic priest
- Jozef Tiso – fascist Slovak politician of the SPP; Roman Catholic priest who became a deputy of the Czechoslovak parliament, a member of the Czechoslovak government, and finally the President of Independent Slovak Republic from 1939–1945, allied with Nazi Germany
- Beda Weber – German Benedictine professor, author, and member of the Frankfurt Parliament
Eastern Catholic Churches
- Paul Weyrich – U.S. conservative political activist and commentator, ordained protodeacon in the Melkite Greek Catholic Church
Congregational Church
- Samuel C. Fessenden – U.S. Congressman, pastor
- Washington Gladden – leading American Congregational church pastor leading member of the Progressive Movement, serving for two years as a member of the Columbus, Ohio city council
- Fred Nile – New South Wales Legislative Council (Australia) member and Fellowship of Congregational Churches minister
Disciples of Christ
- James A. Garfield – preacher, teacher, and lawyer from Ohio before becoming a Congressman and later the 20th President of the United States
- Gerald L. K. Smith – founder of the quasi-fascist America First Party; Disciples of Christ minister
- Jim Spainhower – U.S. politician from Missouri and former Disciples of Christ minister
Dutch Reformed Church
- Thomas François Burgers – President of the South African Republic 1871–77; pastor
- Abraham Kuyper – Dutch politician, journalist, statesman and theologian; founded the Anti-Revolutionary Party and was Prime Minister of the Netherlands between 1901 and 1905; Dutch Reformed Church minister
- Daniel François Malan – former Prime Minister of South Africa and minister
Eastern Orthodox Churches
- Boulos Basili (1916-2010) – priest, first priest to enter the Egyptian Assembly in 1971 after winning a free election in his district Shoubra, in Cairo, Egypt; served in the parliament until 1975
- Miron Cristea – first Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church and Prime Minister of Romania
- Damaskinos – Archbishop of Athens and All Greece (primate of the Church of Greece) and Regent of Greece (1944–1946) for the exiled King George II
- Makarios III – archbishop and primate of the autocephalous Cypriot Orthodox Church (1950–1977) and first President of the Republic of Cyprus (1960–1977)
- Fan S. Noli – Albanian Orthodox bishop and politician, who served briefly as prime minister and regent of Albania in 1924
- Feofan Prokopovich – archbishop and statesman in the Russian Empire, elaborated and implemented Peter the Great's reform of the Russian Orthodox Church
Episcopalian
- John Danforth – former United States Ambassador to the United Nations and former Republican United States Senator from Missouri; ordained Episcopal priest
- Wythe Leigh Kinsolving – Episcopal priest, essayist and campaigner for Democratic candidates in 1910s-1930s, and against US participation in World War II in late 1930s through 1941
Evangelist
- Charles Colson – chief counsel for President of the United States Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1973 and was one of the Watergate Seven; maintains a variety of media channels which discuss contemporary issues from an Evangelical Christian worldview; his views are typically consistent with a politically conservative interpretation of evangelical Christianity
- Eduardo Villanueva (born 6 October 1946) – known as Bro. Eddie;[1] religious and political leader in the Philippines; 2010 Philippine presidential candidate; founder and leader of the Jesus is Lord Church[2]
Evangelical Lutheran
- Lauri Ingman – Archbishop of Turku (1930–1934), Prime Minister of Finland (1918–1919, 1924–1925)
- Dean Johnson – former majority leader of the Minnesota Senate; minister in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Lutheran
- Ida Auken – Denmark
- Margrete Auken – Denmark
- Kjell Magne Bondevik – Norwegian Lutheran minister and politician; Prime Minister of Norway from 1997 to 2000, and from 2001 to 2005
- Joachim Gauck – President of Germany, serving since 18 March 2012
- Walter H. Moeller – American politician of the Democratic party; entered a Lutheran seminary in 1935 and served as a pastor in the 1940s and after his retirement from politics
Methodist
- Canaan Banana – president of Zimbabwe and Methodist minister
- Henry Augustus Buchtel – American public official and educator, ordained to the Methodist Episcopal ministry and served for a year as a missionary in Bulgaria
- John Bull – American clergyman and physician who represented Missouri in the US Congress in 1833 and 1834
- Emanuel Cleaver – United Methodist pastor and a Democratic politician from the state of Missouri; elected to the United States House of Representatives in November 2004 to represent Missouri's 5th congressional district
- Robert W. Edgar – former Congressman and Methodist pastor
- Robert P. Shuler – Prohibition Party candidate who received the highest vote in any election in US history; Methodist pastor
- Donald Soper, Baron Soper – prominent Methodist minister, socialist and pacifist
- Ted Strickland – Governor of Ohio, briefly a United Methodist pastor
- Silas C. Swallow – U.S. Methodist preacher and prohibitionist politician
- Aaron S. Watkins – Prohibition Party candidate and Methodist minister
- Robert L. Williams – third Governor of Oklahoma and Methodist minister
- Terry Wynn – Methodist local preacher and Member of the European Parliament
Pentecostal
- Marcelo Crivella – senator in the federal government of Brazil
- Stockwell Day – has been credentialed with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada
- Andrew Evans – South Australian Legislative Council (Family First Party) member and Pentecostal Christian pastor
- Anne McBride – Canadian politician ordained in the Assemblies of God
- Danny Nalliah – President of an Assemblies of God related group, Family First Party candidate
- Judy Turner – New Zealand politician, pastoral and community worker at New Life Churches, New Zealand
Presbyterian
- William H. Hudnut III – Presbyterian minister, Congressional representative from Indiana 1972–1974, four-term mayor of Indianapolis
- Ian Paisley – First Minister of Northern Ireland, veteran politician and church leader in Northern Ireland; founding member and former Moderator of the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster
- John Witherspoon – signatory of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of New Jersey; the only active clergyman to sign the Declaration
United Church
- Bill Blaikie – current Deputy Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons; a Member of Parliament since 1979, representing the Winnipeg riding of Elmwood—Transcona and its antecedents as a member of the New Democratic Party; Minister of United Church of Canada
- Lorne Calvert – former premier of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan and current leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, as leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party; ordained minister of United Church of Canada
- Brian Howe – Australian politician, was Deputy Prime Minister in the Labor government of Paul Keating, and minister of Uniting Church in Australia
- Stanley Knowles – Canadian parliamentarian; United Church minister
- Doug Lauchlan – Canadian politician, minister and educator, ordained minister in the United Church of Canada
- David MacDonald – United Church of Canada minister and a former Canadian politician and author
- Doug Martindale – politician in Manitoba, Canada; member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba since 1990, serving as a member of the New Democratic Party; ordained United Church minister
- Davis McCaughey – key architect in the formation of the Uniting Church in Australia; Governor of Victoria 1986–1992
- Keith Seaman – Uniting Church in Australia
- Lloyd Stinson – politician in Manitoba, Canada; leader of that province's Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) from 1953 to 1959; ordained United Church minister
- Andrew Young – civil rights activist; former mayor of Atlanta, Georgia; America's first African-American ambassador to the United Nations; United Church of Christ pastor
Other
- Gregorio Aglipay – founded Philippine Independent Church
- Harold Albrecht – Brethren in Christ
- Benjamin W. Arnett – Ohio State Legislature politician and African Methodist Episcopal Church pastor
- Graham Capill – Reformed Churches of New Zealand
- William Irvine – Methodist, then Unitarian
- Donald Malinowski – Polish National Catholic Church
- Kenneth Meshoe – Hope of Glory Tabernacle
- Gordon Moyes – New South Wales Legislative Council (Australia), Christian Democratic Party member, Churches of Christ in Australia minister
- Douglas Nicholls – Churches of Christ in Australia
- Clementa C. Pinckney – African Methodist Episcopal
- Hiram Rhodes Revels – African Methodist Episcopal
- Efraín Ríos Montt – Church of the Word
Unclassified
- Scott Craig – Pastor of Bighorn Canyon Community Church; has represented district 33 in the South Dakota House of Representatives since January 11, 2013
- Reinhold Niebuhr – Christian Realism; in his younger days he was a socialist candidate for New York State Senate
- Wavel Ramkalawan – Seychelles politician and priest
- Tuve Skånberg
- Albert Edward Smith – Communist Party of Canada politician, but considered himself Christian throughout
- William Horace Temple – Christian Socialist
- László Tőkés – Bishop in Reformed Church in Romania and involved in the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania
- Tim Walberg – non-denominational Protestant
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