A RELIETHICAL PRESSURES AND MORAL COMPROMISE IN CHRISTIAN POLITICAL PRACTICE IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA
Keywords:
Christian Ethics; Political Participation; Ethical Compromise; and StewardshipAbstract
This study provides an empirical ethical evaluation of Christian political engagement in Ogun State, Nigeria, focusing on the tension between professed biblical values and political practice. Although Christian participation in politics is widely affirmed as a moral responsibility, fieldwork conducted in January 2026 reveals a significant credibility gap between Christian identity and conduct. Drawing on quantitative data from 426 Christian respondents, the study examines structural pressures shaping political behaviour. Findings indicate that 90.4% agree that Christians face pressure to compromise ethical principles, while 89.0% believe Christian politicians do not consistently follow biblical standards. Furthermore, 89.7% report witnessing electoral malpractice, and 93.2% perceive vote-buying and manipulation as normalized. Additionally, 68.5% believe church leaders cultivate political ties for material benefit, and 83.6% view religion as frequently instrumentalized during campaigns. These results suggest that ethical compromise is systemic. The study argues that Christian political involvement in Ogun State reflects weakened institutional support for integrity, not an absence of faith. Using a stewardship framework, it concludes that without deliberate moral formation, accountability mechanisms, and structural reform, Christian participation risks mirroring rather than transforming the prevailing political culture.
