Churchstate
Church-state refers to the ways in which religious institutions and government authorities interact and influence each other. It covers legal arrangements, public funding, regulation of religious bodies, and the role of faith in public life. Different systems are described as establishment or separation. In establishment models, a state endorses or supports a particular church, often with official rites, state funded clergy, priority in public institutions, or recognition of legal status as a state church. In separation models, the state remains neutral toward religion or accommodates pluralism, providing freedom of worship while avoiding endorsement or funding of single confessions.
Common approaches include the establishment of a state church, recognized as official; the disestablishment of church-state
Historical roots lie in state-building and confessional politics. In many European states, rulers aligned with a