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If one uses their religion to advance any goal other than God's (the salvation of the whole world), they are guilty of idolatry, and they are worshipping a false god.
However, I would say that insofar as social concerns go, if one uses their religion to help people, that's a good thing. There certainly are going to be areas where religion and politics intersect.
Funny you should ask that, since I sort of preached on that this morning. The parable of the wheat and the weeds was the text. I focused on how Jesus said to leave the weeds in place, and let God sort it out in the end. We can leave perceived "weeds" such as Harry Potter, SpongeBob, etc., alone, because 1) we're not even sure if they are good or evil (probably not); and 2) they're distractions which keep us from our true purpose: to be good grains of wheat which God can use to feed the world. Our job is not to uproot the field, but to grow. We let God sort everything out in the end.
I did note how many religions have become over-focused on "weeding," uprooting the good and the bad together, because they're so sure they know what does or does not belong in the garden. Harry Potter? Let him stay. SpongeBob? Ditto.
When we become arbiters of "good" and "evil," then we, too, are guilty of idolatry - by trying to play God. O8)
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