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In a predominantly Christian culture, why do some continue to stir up the notion of “persecution” when they carry their beliefs too far?

Shooting for humor, I posted an anecdote this last Sunday that poked fun at Georgia Republican congressman Paul Broun and his interpretation of the bible and the venue he used to give his sermon.  But of course what comes across as wild-eyed imaginings to some are dead serious claims by those who make them.  It doesn’t make any difference that there is no factual basis for some of these claims.  All that matters to “believers” is that, well, … they believe it. “The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it.”    Such contrived assurances fit nicely into their world view of things and it gathers strength when you get affirmations from other like-minded people as Broun appeared to be getting from his audience.

It’s not an argument that any non-believer really wants to get into with a religious believer.  Because they have an ancient tradition on their side and a thinly credible counter argument of some “biblical authority”, you would be hard pressed to correct any rigidly held beliefs by them.  But Broun makes the mistake of asserting an assumption that has no biblical authority and that flies in the face of some evidence about science that even many Christians have come to accept at varying degrees.

All that stuff I was taught about evolution and embryology and the big bang theory, all that is lies straight from the pit of Hell. And it’s lies to try to keep me and all the folks who were taught that from understanding that they need a savior.  – Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga.  

It would be a stretch at best to link any bible verse to support Broun’s notions that evolution, embryology and the big bang theory are from the devil.  Embryology is not even a theory or belief system but a scientific field of study that’s been around formally since at least 1827.  But interests in embryonic development began with Aristotle hundreds of years before Christianity and the notion of a savior became part of popular thought.  It doesn’t challenge the belief in Jesus as a messiah.  It simply helps describe the  marvelous development from egg to human fetus which Christians are always fond of celebrating.  So why the disparagement of this from Broun?

Let the Flogging Begin

Fundamentalist views have always held that if you were properly indoctrinated with church dogma and later found a different way of thinking that only Satan and his minions could have persuaded you from rejecting biblical truths.  I bought into this myself at one time as a devout “born-again” christian with the aid of C.S. Lewis’ excellent story telling in “The Screwtape Letters”.   Even within the Roman Catholicism I was raised in, the Church taught us that ours was the one true branch of christianity.  As my Dad used to put it, “they’re called Protestants because they protest the original church founded by Peter.”

Christians, which count for nearly 80% of the U.S.population, often cry discrimination when some of the fundamentalists elements within try to lay claim to neutral territory, raising objections from the other 20%.  Much like the white settlers that came here from Europe and claimed land that was long held as the domain of various native Indian tribes, Christians today also impose themselves in the public domain that is shared by other faiths and systems of belief. They simply didn’t then or don’t today see themselves as intruders but as rightful heirs to some divine manifest destiny.  A sense of righteousness often overshadows the reality that theirs is a system of faith not indisputable fact and forgets to allow others the same privilege of putting their system of faith on top of their hierarchical pyramid of choices.  Point this out to them however and the wails of “persecution” ensue.

For people like Paul Broun to suggest that the science of embryology along with the theories of evolution and the Big Bang are the work of the Devil denies that people like me can make that transition out of the faith based almost exclusively on the church’s own historical record.  Even the great intellectual apologetics of C. S. Lewis could not overcome the skepticism that eventually developed within me as I studied the origins of my faith in great detail.   As a strong advocate of the faith years ago and a serious student of history, I discovered in my attempts to fully understand the evolution of Christianity that the institution itself was flawed and their alleged bedrock claims of superiority are marred with historical distortions and jockeying for power within the larger social context.

This revelation was not viewed by me as an attack on some unseen God that may or may not exist but on the church’s position that their insights and only their insights cannot be challenged.  The dogma that has layered over the original core values the earliest Christian groups held and the organized authority of the church over time has created a barrier between the simple truths of “the man from Galilee” and postulations of those who now claim to speak for him.

It’s not that Christians in various parts of the world are not discriminated against by various elements in other cultures but should such persecutions be used to make false parallels in this country?  Only in the U.S. where all other faith systems are dwarfed by Holy Mother Church is it alleged that a very small minority of non-believers are crushing the powerful influence Christianity continues to hold.   The bible and its stories do in fact convey a sense of belonging and can nurture those lost souls whose self-serving values demoralize them and those they are close to.  But when notions become ingrained that allow intolerance and promotes fear, any true disciple of Jesus would have to ask, “who is it here then that is really from the pit of hell”?

If the truths that are claimed to exist in the Bible are infallible then any challenge to them cannot stand up to scrutiny.  Yet this is in fact the weak position many Christians like Broun have put themselves in by relying on ancient texts written by the men of that age to speak to future generations whose world is a far cry from the times the words were first laid on papyrian documents.   There are many relevant messages of hope in scripture but there are also assertions that declare women as property, legitimizes slavery and killing a disobedient child.  If these are infallible truths why aren’t Christians today following them? (not that many wouldn’t like to, I feel)

Scholars have found numerous errors in the Bible

To claim that the bible is “the inerrant word” of God fails to account for the fact that Cain found a wife in the land of Nod shortly after being banished by God. (Gen.4:16-17)  If Cain was the first child of the two original human beings where does this woman come from?   And did God rearrange the universe following the battle between the Jews and the Amorites where supposedly the Almighty stopped the Sun from rotating around the earth until Joshua and his troops had avenged themselves upon their enemies.(Jos. 10:12-13)  If the Christian God is the same “as he was, is now and forever will be” how could his word be in contradiction with certain realties?

People like Broun who hold positions of power in government and declare they will enforce “God’s law” over everything else share that characteristic we see in rigid theocracies like that of the Taliban or in iron-fisted rulers by atheistic despots like Stalin and Pol Pot.  If free will is indeed an inherent part of biblical teaching then what gives Broun and others the right to force their views on those who have equally strong beliefs that contest them?

Legislating MoralityDo rush to judgements hurt the character of religion?

Back in 1985 John Denver testified before the Senate Committee for Commerce, Science and Transportation on what he saw as censorship by the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) formed by Tipper Gore and other Washington wives to ban offensive lyrics that referenced sex, drugs and graphic violence in the music of that era.  In his presentation Denver pointed out how some radio stations banned his song “Rocky Mountain High”, thinking the lyrics were violating a FCC censorship order about promoting drug use.   Denver also claimed that  some theaters refused to put the name of his movie, Oh God! on their marquees as did some newspapers ads for the movie out of concern that it may be viewed by rigid fundamentalist as “irreverent”.

If God is really in control then why do religious fanatics undercut this belief by legislating morality?  I was raised to believe that we need God, he doesn’t need us and yet the actions recently taken in many conservative state legislatures aimed at forcing unwanted pregnancies to occur is done by those who claim to be acting on God’s behalf. Is the omniscient and omnipresent God of the bible no longer effectual or too overwhelmed where he was once capable of counting the very hairs on our head and placed more value on each of us than any one sparrow?(Matt. 10:29-31)

As a society it can be destructive if we all act on our own self-interests.  Cohesiveness is vital for survival and this often entails finding good leadership and allowing ourselves to follow their lead as it serves our need for survival.  But we are not sheep and when claims are made to herd us in to a robotic, Stepford-wife direction, then it becomes necessary to raise this concern and challenge those views that would enslave our free wills.

The bible, I found, does indeed have lessons for life and can serve as a guide for many who are as children.  But as we mature we are able to look outside the bounds that an individual or an institution has set for us when it no longer seems to meet the reality of our time.   Women and certain cultures are not second class citizens as ancient scriptures declared.  Nor are claims of “abominations” legitimate when referring to gays today from a view held by people who believed at one time that the earth was the center of the Universe, believing that this too was the will of God.

Science is a method, not an all-powerful force or an absolute measure of what exists.  It is an assortment of peer-reviewed fields of study that seek to make sense of the physical realties in our world and offer reasonably sound answers to phenomena that were once thought to exist only in the realm of the ethereal or metaphysical, such as the sun being pulled around the earth by a charioteer.

Christians can be both scientist and followers of biblical concepts and principles but they can’t claim one has preeminence over the other based on outdated data and ancient texts.  They must assert themselves in light of the here and now and speak to people in a way that allows them to identify with the information both sides present.  Insisting that what one has to offer should not be questioned is not a path that leads to truth but one that leads to suppression.

A couple of years ago I spelled out in an article why I could no longer practice the faith of my fathers.  I concluded it with this which seems fitting for this essay as well.

“If I were to re-write that part of John in chapter 3 that posits Jesus as the final solution, I would do it in the way that I now understand it. For God so loved the world that he sent people into the world like Jesus to serve as a light and a guide to lift you up and fulfill the life you have been given. You are a slave to no man and you are above no man. It is love for the life I have given you and the companionship of others that will strengthen you in times of stress. Without love your existence has no meaning. Without sharing you are the lowest of all species. It is through your interconnectedness that true salvation is found”.  - How I Learned to Move Beyond the God of My Religious Upbringing

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Separation of church and state may indeed not be an absolute in American jurisprudence as Rick Santorum suggested recently.  How we determine what is good and bad, right and wrong, has and will stem from religious teachings and has its place in American political discourse.  This should be done however with the understanding that one set of religious tenants do not exclude all others.

The recent charges by many Christians that their religious freedoms were being attacked because the government sought to enforce a policy requiring some religious institutions like hospitals and charities to add contraception to their health insurance coverage for female employees raised a pretty big stink.  Though never really brought to the forefront by the mainstream media and many on the right who railed against this policy, these charges against Christianity do not seem to carry the same weight when other religions seek to practice their faith in ways they deem are their constitutional rights.

Islam has been the primary victim of many Christian conservative religious groups who have protested at multiple locations the rights of Muslims to worship where they freely and legally choose.  The Islamic Community Center in Manhattan near “ground zero” is but the most obvious example.  America is primarily a country where Christianity is the largest faith orientation, with the greatest numbers of those in the Protestant denominations.

Wherever majorities tend to dominate they often make it difficult for “interlopers” to assimilate into the existing culture.  It is no different in those countries where Christians are the minority.  Because of our religious freedoms heritage that was established at the birth of this nation, the animus toward such outsiders has had little legal and moral ground to stand on.  The Protestant majority staved off as best they could the Catholic immigrations back at the turn of the 20th century with the Italian and Irish influxes through tougher immigration laws and strong political majorities.

The anti-semitism toward Jews by all Christian sects was also very pronounced back then and well into the 20th century.  There is even evidence that this prejudice continues  unabated into the 21st century.  A 2004 study by the AntiDefamation League found that “Anti-Semitic incidents in the United States have reached their highest level in nine years”.  

But outside the mainline faith systems there are also those less familiar to us, especially those amongst native Americans whose religious views still reflect a communion with the earth and its creatures.  One tribe, the Northern Arapaho Tribe in Wyoming, has recently made headlines to establish their right to use the feathers of a freshly killed bald eagle in religious ceremonies.  Because there has been a long-standing law to preserve the bald eagle in America, the Northern Arapaho Tribes have found themselves on the other side of U.S. law for killing the bird for use in their religious ceremonies, until just recently.

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has taken the unusual step of issuing a permit allowing a Native American tribe to kill two bald eagles for religious purposes.

The agency’s decision comes after the Northern Arapaho Tribe in Wyoming filed a federal lawsuit last year contending the refusal to issue such permits violates tribal members’ religious freedom.  – SOURCE 

An on-line MSNBC poll related to this story found that nearly 4 out of 5 surveyed opposed the killing of bald eagles for any reason, even as a part of their religious beliefs while less than one in five apparently found the similarities between the Christian church’s right to restrict the use of contraception and the right of a small band of native Americans killing two bald eagles a year as a part of their faith beliefs.

Should the killing of bald eagles be allowed?

16 %   Yes, but for religious purposes only.

79%   No, there’s never a good reason to kill bald eagles.

5 %   I don’t know.

This single question poll of course is unscientific and the numbers who side with the rights of the Arapaho’s religious freedom could be loaded with members of orthodox christianity while those who felt there’s never a good reason to kill bald eagles, may be heavily weighted by more liberal, “tree-huggers” types who also protest wars and the death penalty.  I identify with this latter group at some levels.  Ironically, I think, native American cultures, who view plants as the ‘hair of Mother Earth’ would likely feel a closer association with the liberal groups who seek to preserve the planet rather than exploit her natural resources for monetary gain.

The sacred medicine bundle is the most holy of holies among all the Native American First People … [and] contains a varied collection of objects and representations of spiritual significance, from animal skins and effigies to ceremonial pipes. 

What the poll does indicate though is that there appears to be a double standard in our society that demands justice for a majority while failing to see that others who don’t share similar socio-religious values have similar needs.  This is at odds it seems with that popular Tea Party sentiment that demands we protect our personal liberty against what they view as an over reaching government.  Such a view coincides with what the British liberal political philosopher John Stuart Mill called the tyranny of the majority.

I raise this issue citing this example because in this election year the shouters who beat others over the head with ideological talking points drown out the more critical thinking that allows tolerance among our multi-culture society, showing that those who hold to a narrow and rigid application of one’s belief system can trip over their own words when they are put side by side by the circumstances of minorities; minorities that often find themselves ostracized by majorities.

Multi-culturalism itself is a whipping boy for many on the right who’ve labeled it as “collectivism”, which is code for that which does not reflect early 19th century populations.  A cursory study of this population will show that they were almost exclusively white and Protestant and governed in large part by land owning males.

Democracy is indeed a messy process and as the preamble to the Constitution points out, we are still a work in process as we seek “to form a more perfect union”.  The fact that the founding fathers intimated that change and growth would be a part of who we were to become cancels out any notion that we should remain what we started out as.

Adapting to those changes requires that we make room to accommodate that which doesn’t hurt us even though it may not be something we would practice.  Religions are cultural expressions of man’s spiritual nature.  Confining it to only one limited point of view is not only unhealthy, it suggests that those who restrict wider interpretations of the Constitution as it’s authors apparently intended, do so out of a certain level of ignorance and fear on where our future is headed.


Raised in the Catholic Church and a one-time professed “born again” Christian, I have since discovered through careful historical readings that the fundamentalist views of some Christians today do not always reflect the reality of this system of faith.

 

I hate to come across as a humbug this time of year so if you are in the “Christmas Spirit” and don’t want to be brought down from it, you might want to skip this post until another time.  The subject matter isn’t necessarily related to this “jolly” season but it was a recent letter to the editor in my local newspaper that activated my response here.

Affirming his belief that we should keep the Christ in Christmas, the writer of that letter seems to ignore the fact as many do that though the season is all about the birth of the baby Jesus as described in the new testament, it is in fact NOT the actual birthday of the Nazarene.  Nobody really knows when that is but historical records indicate that some believed it to be the first week in January.

Bruce David Forbes, author of “Christmas: A Candid History,” says those who delay Christmas festivities can take some comfort in the fact that Dec. 25 isn’t the date of the birth of Christ.

When Christians started celebrating his birth in the 300s after the Roman emperor Constantine converted to that religion, they didn’t know the birthdate, so it appears that they picked a day to coincide with Romans’ midwinter celebrations of their own gods. Meanwhile, Christians in more eastern countries, like Turkey and Greece, were already celebrating on Jan. 6.   SOURCE

It seems we have the pagans to thank for this holiest of Christian holidays.

Also, in a news story back in 2008, astronomers speculated that, based on their calculations of when the “star of David” appeared over Bethlehem a couple of thousand years ago, that the birth of Jesus was sometimes in June.  If that notion had been picked up by the Roman Catholic church initially, all of the “White Christmas” references would never have materialized and Santa’s red suit would now be a tropical shirt and shorts attire.

But this isn’t the part of the writer’s letter that rubs me the wrong way.  It is the notion that we are primarily a nation “founded on Judeo-Christian values”.  There is no argument from me that much of what our laws are based on come from the Mosaic laws and are inherently fitted to some core christian values.  But it is distortion of the worst kind, in my opinion, to presume that everyone who came to this country did so to establish Judeo-christian values.

Sure the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth Rock were escaping religious persecution in England but let’s remember that that rigid group of people had a set of values in many ways that resembled more how the Romans treated early Christians than they did the teachings of Jesus.  The most well-known display of such un-Christian behavior was the innocent killing of people that were hysterically deigned as “witches”.  Fear, not compassion, compelled the actions by which people burned some of their own for alleged heretical beliefs.

Expressing the Christian virtue of Tolerance?

The social structure back in the early colonial days was strictly paternalistic and the legal codes “especially in the Puritan north – served as enforcement arms of religious orthodoxy.”  Women and non-whites were viewed as lesser human beings.

Community leaders acted as stern fathers to the children God had entrusted to their care. Members of the community were supposed to be taught God’s paths for their lives and brought back into the fold when they strayed – but the rod was not spared.

Laws against Quakers were … worse than those against Anabaptists – they could be executed if they dared to return after having been banished. Quakers appear to have been especially feared as threatening to “undermine & ruine” the properly instituted authorities of the colony. Two Quakers were made examples of and hanged in 1659, but they weren’t the only ones.

Blasphemy was another crime which merited swift and harsh punishment – as with the previous examples, any act which might undermine unquestioning faith as promoted by the local religious leaders was regarded as threatening to undermine general social stability. Blasphemers could, at court discretion, be put in the pillory, whipped, have his tongue bored out with a hot iron, or be forced to stand in the gallows with a rope around his neck.  SOURCE

People like this letter writer cherry pick those parts of our socio-religious culture to create an illusion that is a far cry from what life was really like back when.  If they were really so adamant that our nation should reflect the Judeo-christian tradition then they should be putting to death their disobedient children (Deuteronomy 21:18) and punishing bankers that have profited greatly from loans to people of low income. (Deuteronomy 23:19-20, Exodus 22:25, Leviticus 25:35-37)

A closer reading of the founding fathers who put our constitution together will show that many of these men were not great men of faith and many, like Ben Franklin, were Deists, not Christians.  Their primary concerns as they spelled out the laws of this land were based more on property rights than on concepts found in Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount since they were pretty much all land-owning aristocrats and not humble men who “fear the Lord”.

Enjoy your religious holidays and prescribe to those tenants in your faith that reflect compassion and tolerance but don’t presume to be a victim in a society where most people claim to be Christians while giving more support to Wall Street bankers than Occupy protesters and attack all Muslims because of the radical views of a minority.  I can’t be sure, but it’s possible that that is not what the baby Jesus would want.

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How I Learned to Move Beyond the God of My Religious Upbringing 


I recently watched the 2007 documentary “For the Bible Tells Me So” which addresses the cultural perception of homosexuality in America as it does in many other cultures.  The one striking thing I got from this film that I have hit on in just about every piece I have written on the subject, is how contemporary Christians take biblical phrases and notions out of context.

They are also guilty of attributing meanings to words and stories in the Bible that were not intended by the sources they take them from, especially from the hebrew version of the Torah that Christians refer to as the old testament as well as any ancient greek text used by early christians as they began to document the New Testament.  Too many lives have been ruined because of the unfounded notion that the Bible is the “inerrant word of God”.

Like many heterosexuals, I was raised in a conservative christian environment that condemned homosexuality and routinely compared it predatory sex offenders, bestiality and pornography.  I have found however that like other subject matter provided me through a focused set of standards, reality is often far different.  It was only after faithfully researching the available data outside some forms of religious dogma did I discover why we were raised thinking as we did about gay people.

The word “abomination” used by the church and her followers is one word that has been used in excess when it comes to homosexuality, especially in comparison to the other abominations referred to in the Bible.  The seven Noahide Laws do not mention homosexuality explicitly nor is it in the Holiness code found in the Book of Leviticus that permitted slavery while it authorized killings for the “abominations” of a disrespectful child, an adulterer, a person who takes the Lord’s name in vain or the daughter of a priest who commits prostitution.

The original meaning that comes form the jewish word, “sheqet”, finds certain behavior not acceptable to their customs and therefore made them less than pure in the eyes of their God.  Jews who followed the Torah and the Mosaic laws therein were more likely to be rebuked or ostracized from their people for their abominations rather than killed or condemned to hell.  There is nothing in the Old or New Testaments that condemns homosexuals to such a level that makes it preeminent above all the abominations mentioned in the Bible.

What are considered abominations as stated in Proverbs 6: 16 – 19 are

A proud look, a lying tongue,
and hands that shed innocent blood,
An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations,
feet that be swift in running to mischief,
A false witness that speaketh lies,
and he that soweth discord among  brethren.

Much of this is behavior that we see in the anti-gay crowds who protest anything associated with the gay lifestyle of our friends, neighbors and relatives.

Fundamentalist Christians today have somehow justified their hate for homosexuality but seldom do they convey any hate towards those who charge interest on a loan (Lev 25:37),  crossbreed livestock (Lev 19:19) or get tattoos (Lev 19:28), all violations of “God’s law”..  They have made an unfounded statement that “same sex marriage threatens the institution of marriage” without providing any real argument that stands up to close scrutiny.

What is an abomination in this country is the discord among people created by some to fit a narrow, hateful frame of reference.  Biblical scholars have found this possibly derives primarily from a single biblical source using a Protestant English translation of Paul’s comments in 1Corinthians 6:9 and Romans 1:28.

These translations generally interpret the Greek words “malakoi” and “arsenokoitai” as referring to homosexuals.

We can be fairly certain that this is not the meaning that Paul wanted to convey. If he had, he would have used the Greek word “paiderasste.” That was the standard term at the time for males who had sex with males. We can conclude that he probably meant something different from persons who engaged in male-male adult sexual behavior. Down through the years, Christians have interpreted these words as referring to people of lacking a high moral standing, or to masturbators, or to men who sexually abuse boys, or to boys who are the victims of sexual abuse. Interpreting these passages as referring to sexually active homosexuals appears to be simply the latest in a long series of attempts to make sense out of obscure words. The precise meaning is unknown; it was buried with Paul.  SOURCE

I sincerely hope that as the public becomes more educated about homosexuality apart from strict religious stigmas, that their tolerance of such increases, as recent polls indicate.   Similarly, I feel that as more states like New York refute the inequality of gay marriage taboos, many of those who have been misled by their religious upbringings will search their hearts deeper for the core message of love in the so-called “word of God”,  and acknowledge that not all people are required to present themselves within the narrow perceptions of the misinformed and the homophobic.

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There is a bible verse that sits at the center of what the Christian faith once symbolized to me.   Though I no longer associate myself with the Christian Church, this verse still has meaning to me.  It is the story of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10. Samaritans and Jews hated each other especially during “the first century because Samaritans had desecrated the Jewish Temple at Passover with human bones.”

It’s a message that speaks to tolerance; the characteristic that is always missing when people promote wars and persecute those outside each others way of life.  It seems however that this is where this teaching remains for many – in the past – as we experience those who claim to represent the faith as they disregard it completely in their actions today.

One of the worst and constant examples of this is the Pastor Fred Phelps and his Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas.  With total disregard for the privacy and sanctity of  burying loved ones, this band of Cretans gravitate to the funerals of soldiers and cast ugly epithets at the deceased soldier’s family to show their contempt for a military that allows gays to serve.  Clearly there is a lunacy here that only the members of this cult can make such a connection to.

But there are many others that have popped up since 9/11 that are equally scornful of their perceived enemies and who make a mockery of their religious core values to show mercy toward those they have inbred biases toward.  Many Americans who were outraged by the heinous acts of that awful day have allowed a level of fear and ignorance to overcome them to the point where they now see all Muslims as terrorists.

It’s a hate focused on a culture they hardly understand; very similar to what we saw from white Christians when slavery was accepted by many of them during the 19th century and that prevailed toward the freed blacks well into the 20th century.

The most recent display of this hate-filled intolerance was held February 13th of this year in front of a Yorba Linda, Calif. mosque in Orange County where Muslims were having a fund-raising dinner for a woman’s shelter.  As Muslim families entered their place of worship with their small children the crowd jeered them with some obscenities and yelled “Go back Home” to many of the Muslims who were born here in the U.S.  Others shouted out “Mohammad was a child molester … a pervert … a fraud”  Some of the women attacked Islamic Sharia law by accusing several Muslim men of beating their wives and having “sex with [their] nine-year old daughters”.

Across the street these vilifiers held a rally that was attended by several Republican politicians.  One was Villa Park Councilwoman Deborah Pauly who called the Muslim fund-raiser “pure, unadulterated evil” and indicated she knew many Marines, of which she proudly claimed her son was one of, who “would be willing to, uh, help these terrorists to an early meeting in paradise”.  All to the laughter of many in the crowd.  Did she mean murder them?

Another Republican attendee was Congressman Ed Royce who misrepresented what’s stated in public schools about freedom of speech, saying kids were taught that “every idea was right; that no one should criticize other’s position, no matter how odious.”  His implication here was that there are limits to this notion.

Multiculturalism, Royce said, was a barrier to enable people to make the “critical judgment we need to make to prosper as a society.” What the hell does that mean?  Congressman Gary Miller was also there who praised the angry crowd saying he was “proud of what they were doing” and ironically told them not “to let people who disagree with them destroy [this country]”.

The tape can viewed in it’s entirety here.  I’ve watched several videos of Westboro protestors and other than their deranged sentiments expressed on their signs I saw no human behavior that was as viciously expressed as it was by the Orange County Christians.  It is the dehumanizing actions of such people who renders a faith hollow after having one of their greatest biblical heroes call charity the greater quality than faith and hope (1Cor. 13:13)

It is the acts of so-called Christians like this that validated my decision years ago to disassociate myself from Christianity.  Not that all Christians, or other members of the world’s religions are inherently evil but that religion itself can be the seed for much of what is destructive in our culture.  The fact that fanatical minorities like the Orange County christians within each religion exists to express themselves in such hurtful ways drags the better elements in the faith down into the mire with them.  But it does serve as testimony that debunks Congressman Royce’s contention that only “others” are guilty of this.

The Orange County Christians represent more the conventional views of the Sadducees and Pharisees in New Testament scriptures that Christians hold responsible for Jesus’ execution as well as the mob that stood before Pilate shouting  “crucify him, crucify him”.   The core values I found in the New Testament are not honored over the bigotry that people like this grow up with.  Many were and still are indoctrinated to a level that leaves them clueless, much like that legal expert in Luke 10:29 who inquired of Jesus , “who is my neighbor?”


Midwest style of Sharia Law in the “Mount Rushmore State”?

Conservative Christians are quick to condemn Muslim law that suppresses the women in Afghanistan and other Muslim nations around the world, but when they seek to enforce similar heavy-handed measures they are seen as serving the spiritual needs of their community and “a need to protect the pregnant mother’s interest in her relationship with her child and her health”.

Anti-abortionist legislators in South Dakota are pushing a bill, HB 1217, that requires a woman to be counseled at a religious affiliated center before a doctor is allowed to perform a state approved abortion.  Creating the illusion that women may be coerced into having an abortion, fundamentalist activists have pressured their state representatives to side step the existing law that allows limited abortions and impose a restriction that they hope will prevent choices women make regarding unwanted pregnancies

“In search of an answer to a non-existent problem, anti-choice legislators are proposing that before all women undergo an abortion, they need to be evaluated for signs of coercion” reports Robin Marty in a recent AlterNet article And according to the anti-choice politicians, the best person to make the final decision about the woman’s mental state isn’t a physician, a psychologist, or even a certified counselor.  No, instead she should be evaluated by a paid employee or volunteer at one of the state’s anti-abortion, primarily Christian-based crisis pregnancy centers. (Will Draconian South Dakota Force Women to Visit Religious Pregnancy Centers Before Abortions? by Robin Marty, AlterNet.com, 2/18/11)

One similarity between South Dakota’s HB 1217 and restrictions on women in Afghanistan  is where women in Afghanistan are “not allowed to be treated by male doctors unless accompanied by a male chaperone”, an inconvenience for many men that would lead to illnesses remaining untreated for the women.  Check out the full list of restrictions imposed on Afghani women here.  Is the hypocrisy missed on conservatives who support this bill by coercing young ladies to attend these “counseling” centers to make sure they aren’t being coerced to have an abortion?

The Taliban impose their rule through their interpretation of Sharia law which is part of the Muslim’s religious faith.  The South Dakota bill HB 1217 that requires women seeking an abortion to first attend a christian-based counseling center before a doctor can approve an abortion is a weak attempt to disguise a religious connection between the law and the views of many fundamentalist Christians.

HB1217 was preceded by an even more draconian bill that opened the door to make murder justifiable homicide for anyone who “killed” a fetus, a law clearly aimed at abortion clinics and the doctors who served them.  Fortunately that effort was defeated but only, some think, to propose what supporters view as the less offensive HB 1217 bill.

There of course is a world of difference between what the Taliban impose on their women and what is going on in South Dakota but I would suggest, as do conservatives when they fear any attempts to alter their traditions or conventions, that one small change can become a slippery slope to further changes.



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