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Church & State....Lift & separate.
I was talking with a fundie yesterday. :eek:
He claims, since the Constitution doesn’t provide for a separation of church and state, it shouldn’t be the accepted policy. Can anyone tell me where this policy originated? What's the legal precedent? :confused: |
Umm, Bruce, I'm pretty sure this is the foundation:
Amendment I Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Are you OK, man? |
Is the exact phrase in the USC? No. Does that mean that every minute symbol or mention of God be removed today, from any local, state, or federal gov't function, proceeding or building.....
That's the debate. Here again, I see things from a different perspective. If the big push is to completely remove Christianity from the gov't...or the society, fine. Let's wait a bit until their numbers decline per the current trend and then there shouldnt be much resistance. On the other hand, if you feel for some reason that you must throw gas on the fire and get the base to dig in and possibly increase their numbers, the conflict will only grow. If you see that as the "cost of doing business" , fine by me. There are many more in a wide variety of stations in life throughout the country though. But then again.....oh fuck it, where's my beer? |
The First Ammendment is where it's encoded in the Constitution. The phrase "separation between church and state" comes from a letter written by Thomas Jefferson, in which he explains the meaning of the First Ammendment, as he sees it.
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According to that somewhat dry, but interesting book I just finished reading, "The American Leadership Tradition," Jefferson was very pro-liberty, but very anti-church/christianity, which is where the "wall of separation" notion comes from.
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Sorry I'm late getting back here, had to bury a close friend. :(
Thanks for the link, HM. :thumbsup: Quote:
If the Ten Commandments is on the police station wall is that promoting Judaism? |
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Something along the lines of a concept of mine, "I don't fear the godly man, I fear the man of god." |
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These do not sound like the words of someone on an anti-Christian crusade. Jefferson sounds very generous and ecumenical in his response, IMO. It was always my understanding that the seperation of church and state came from the high percentage of colonists who came to America to escape persecution for their religous beliefs in Europe. On the question of a town of 3,000 Christians all desiring a nativity scene on the courthouse lawn: this would be the government respecting a religion - Christianity. Suppose that the very next year a Jew or a Pagan or a Buddhist happened to move into this community and there on the courthouse lawn was this obvious government endorsement of Chritianity. Wouldn't the Jew, Pagan, etc. feel that in order to get along with the town court, police, county commissioners he'd better make a secret of his religous belief or even convert whether he wanted to or not? And why wouldn't these 3,000 Christians be content with a nicely done nativity scene on the front lawn of their local church? Surely, this would be both more appropriate and more sacred? And, Bruce: I am very sorry to hear about your friend. You have my deep sympathy. |
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Government property = common property. If the resident Christians want to put up a nativity, hey, knock yourself out. The Jews say we want a menorah, OK, have at it. Ralf worships sheep, uh, go do that in private. If you truly want to separate government from religion, I'm in favor, but not by repressing public expression. If the Christian kid sees a menorah or a pagan celebration and questions what it's about, he all might learn a little more. He might be less fearful of others. :) |
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HM, you obviously don't live in small town, usa. :)
Mari, you stinkin' liberal. :joylove: |
Small Town, USA has plenty of church lawns to put nativities on - probably more than Big City USA.
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