Originally posted by nikkijean1
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Keeping Church and State Seperate...
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I am in no way offended or bothered by what anyone has said. People are only expressing their own beliefs, which we can all take or leave as we wish.
The Catholic thing really didn't cause me any trouble. When I was old enough to think for myself I knew they were wrong (about a lot of things, but I'm still Pentecostal because they also had a lot of things right.)
The reason I believe there has to be a separation between church and state is because it gets too sticky on mixing morality and legality. In Idaho when I was in high school the kids were allowed to take LDS classes during school hours, but I as a Pentecostal had no such privileges. Kids should be allowed to express or participate in their own faith when it's not on the taxpayers time or dollar. If they want to have a lunch prayer group on school grounds fine, if they want to pray before a game, fine (as an individual decision) but it shouldn't be required.
I have no way of knowing for sure what the founding fathers intended, no one can know. It can be argued that they had their own Masonic religion going on (my opinion is Masonry is a religion)Karen
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Originally posted by FrontosaurusRex View PostIt was taught as the Theory of Evolution. Its no longer a theory. Its scientific fact. How does anybody see if any differently. We dont know HOW the single cell developed into the complex organisms that we are today, but at least we're trying to figure it out scientifically.
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Originally posted by Darbex View Post..... I suggest reading more information on the founders and you will get a whole new perspective I know I did when I started.
Incidentally, back I did a paper a while back trying to argue that the founding fathers were against mixing government and religion, but during my research i realized that most of the founding fathers not only endorsed religion, but in fact used government to promote religion, in particular Christianity. I ended up concluding that either
1) The founding fathers were hypocrites in that they did something which is contrary to their intention for this country, or
2) They believed that it is ok for government to endorse religion. (Different from passing a law ESTABLISHING a religion. They believed that government should ENDORSE not ESTABLISH.)
I'll go dig that paper up....
Update:
oohh! I found it! Here are a few examples.
1) Fisher Ames in reaction to the increasing number of secular books being introduced into classrooms.
"“...we have a dangerous trend beginning to take place in our education....We've become accustomed of late to putting little books in the hands of children containing fables with moral lessons. We are spending less time in the classroom on the Bible, which should be the principle text in our schools. The Bible states these great moral lessons better than any other man made book.”
2) Thomas Jefferson (who penned the term "seperation of church & state) on setting aside government land for the native indians “for the sole use of Christian Indians and the Moravian Brethren Missionaries for the civilizing of the Indians and promoting Christianity”. (So much for "seperation")
3) United States Congress in 1780 issued a proclamation “to cause the knowledge of Christianity to spread all over the Earth” (Somebody call the ACLU and arrest these guys!)
4) Congress passed an ordinance (and signed into law by George Washington in Aug 1789) that any territories that want to join the United States were required to teach religion in their schools (NW Ordinance, Section XIV, Article III).
5) Up till the civil war, the capitol building (more specifically the house of representatives) was transformed into a church with BOTH Jefferson & Madison in attendance during sunday worship services. And worship singing was led by the US Marine Corps Band. The speakers podium was used as a preaching pulpit (nancy pulosi has big shoes to fill).
6) John Hancock. "Sensible of the importance of Christian piety and virtue to the order and happiness of a state, I cannot but earnestly commend to you every measure for their support and encouragement. . . . [N]ot only the freedom but the very existence of the republics . . . depend much upon the public institutions of religion." (Independent Chronicle. Nov 2, 1780)
7) Henry Laurens. "I had the honor of being one among many who framed that Constitution. . . . In order effectually to accomplish these great ends, it is incumbent upon us to begin wisely and to proceed in the fear of God; and it is especially the duty of those who bear rule to promote and encourage piety [referring to religion] and virtue and to discourage every degree of vice and immorality."
8) Oliver Ellsworth (supreme court justice in 1802) "[T]he primary objects of government, are peace, order, and prosperity of society. . . . To the promotion of these objects, particularly in a republican government, good morals are essential. Institutions for the promotion of good morals are therefore objects of legislative provision and support and among these . . . religious institutions are eminently useful and important."
9) ALL 50 STATES reference GOD in their constitutions. (Go check it out if you don't believe) . Here's the one for Texas "We the People of the Republic of Texas, acknowledging,with gratitude, the grace and beneficence of God.....". If the founding government of each state wanted their state to have nothing to do with religion, then why would they allow such a thing?
10) The first US Supreme court opened with (guess what?)... a marathon FOUR HOUR prayer session. Asking "almighty God" for guidance in doing their job.
Lots of other examples... but my fingers are cramping.... I'll update later
You are more than entitled to say that the concept of religion is bogus and you want our government and schools to have nothing to do with it, but to say that the founding government did not ENDORSE Christianity in government & schools is Absurd.Last edited by nacra99; 05-11-2010, 11:58 AM.
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Originally posted by Darbex View PostRhett you know the funny thing is I used to be just like you in my disdain for religion. I thought it was all created by a bunch of lunatic individuals that felt alone in the world and needed an explanation for what is going on around them. Until one day I found him. I told myself that there is no way I am feeling this this is all in my head, then I started to walk to the podium in a church I was attending for a girl I was dating. I kept trying to stop myself but I just couldnt I cant explain it other than it was the hand of God. I know you will just roll your eyes at that and thats fine but what I really wanted to point out was that you cant call Evolution a scientific fact when it changes all the time. To me Scientific facts are all theories because everyday we are finding new "facts" that disprove the previous "fact" so I wish we all would stop using "scientific fact" when its not. A prime example is the idea of black holes. It started with we knew for a fact that they didnt exist anywhere. But we kept saying well why are these universes weight so much more than the sum of all the stars. So scientists kept searching and decades later discovered there were black holes called Super massive black holes that was spinning at the center of active galaxys and you can see them by the matter ejecting from the core of the galaxy. And it was fact that is the only places they were. Then came some scientists that were trying to investigate the center of other non-active galaxys as our own Milky Way. They argued that there must be black holes as well. The scientific community laughed and said it is not possible and their is factual evidence that they only exist in certain galaxys. A few scientists devoted 10 years and discovered that there are dormant black holes in non-active galaxys. Waiting and hiding for a star to come to close to it, in which the energy from the star will be consumed by the black hole re-igniting its core. My point is what you think is fact is not a fact its a theory. Its our feeble attempt to be god and our minds are to small to understand that we dont know everything like we wish we did.
MarkWhat are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.
Robert Anson Heinlein
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Originally posted by thekarens View PostI have no way of knowing for sure what the founding fathers intended, no one can know. It can be argued that they had their own Masonic religion going on (my opinion is Masonry is a religion)
Yes, I agree with the Freemason reference as well. It was very similar to todays Church of Global Warming movement in our Governments left. Both are all about power and money.All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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Originally posted by wesleydnunder View PostAs the environment changes, so do the animals and plants to adapt to it. Those that do, survive, those that don't, go extinct. This is the process of evolution and it is a fact, not a theory. Life on this planet evolves, period.
Mark
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Originally posted by Darbex View PostNo actually it was socially acceptable to allow this and many of the people that were our founders were not the cruel owners you may think of them as and some actually paid their workers for their work on their plantations. It wasnt as easy as you may think to just stop using the labor in those days farming was a very manual labor process and actually there were a lot of whites that worked on the same farms. These were the people that the term rednecks come from due to their work on the farm causing the back of their necks to turn red from sun exposure. You have to remember as humans we all commit wrongs that we didnt realize were wrong at the time. I suggest reading more information on the founders and you will get a whole new perspective I know I did when I started.I love my baby girl!
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Argh!
Evolution IS a theory, as I said before. However, a "theory" in the scientific community is totally different from our vernacular use of the term "theory."
Anyone up for an Evolution thread? I'm game...if anyone wants to see me go crazy, that'll do it!"Millennium hand and shrimp!"
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Originally posted by nikkijean1 View PostI don't need to read up, i wasn't disputing any facts about the history of the us...i was just pointing out some contradictions in the points you were making....you made it sound as if your research led you to believe that they put things in the constitution to protect slaves knowing that one day they would need it but did not push to get rid of it then because it was easier for the country to have slaves....i know WHY people back then used slaves, and the reasons that many people today still use to justify it but that doesn't mean that it is justified. And when you bring church into the government but are doing things that the church should have STRONGLY disagreed with then it just seems contradictory. From the beginning of this country the government has done things that contradict with what a good Christian should do....so to me it should be all or none, if people want church and state to not be separated then they need to lead the country as a good Christian would, and i don't think anyone could argue that our government does or ever has done so.
But we cannot ignore the fact that a group of good Christians finally "woke up" to this realization and it was the Christian movement who started the abolitionist movement both in europe (england) and in the United States that ended slavery. Abraham Lincoln was one of these people and we know how things unfolded.
Christian endorsement of slavery is an abuse of the religion.
A worldview must be judged by their teaching and logical outcome, NOT by their abuse.
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Originally posted by Mzungu View PostArgh!
Evolution IS a theory, as I said before. However, a "theory" in the scientific community is totally different from our vernacular use of the term "theory."
Anyone up for an Evolution thread? I'm game...if anyone wants to see me go crazy, that'll do it!
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Karen,
I was really worried this morning as I was leaving for work, that you may have thought was I posted was in response to something said by you. With all love and respect, I promise you it was to comments above, and was typing, erasing, re-writing, and then just posted it and left for work.
The only scripture I quoted word for word was the Genesis quote. My point there was simply a reminder to us all that we are on a time table while here on this Earth. This salvation thing, is for each of us to work out in however way we can before that time should end. What is important is knowing he is there always ready for us to find our way to him. For some, that may never happen.
For some that inner peace is this may be your one and only life to live, so live it, so love it..just know that one day it will end. What mark you leave behind is what will matter most here, what mark you make for eternity is what you worked out with him.380G For Sale $3000 Acrylic tank & stand
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