Fusion Pimp wrote:One things that you two seem to have forgotten(Palz/Kilarin), that is, this country was founded on Christian principles. It's only in the last 30 years that those principles have been challenged.Ironically, in the last 30 years things have gone terribly awry.
So you wouldn't say that things were bad during the 1930's? Actually, you are leaving the 1960's out as well. And lets not forget that before the civil war America supported slavery, that was really nice. The 1890's were a period of decadence as well.
Also, when stating that our country was founded upon religious principles, don't forget that most of the founding fathers were NOT Baptist or Lutherans . They were Deist. Your pastor would have been horrified at the theology of Benjamin Franklin or Thomas Jefferson or most of the rest.
Which is all beside the point because actually I AGREE with you that this country has gone downhill in the last 30 years, and that the people forgetting God is one of the main reasons. Where we disagree is on whether INSTITUTIONALIZING Christianity can fix this.
Lets look at an example of how entangling government and religion HURTS religion.
The "United Methodist Children's Home" was established in 1871 specifically to take in orphans from the civil war and give them a proper Methodist home and upbringing. But in 2002 they ran into a snag. Two things came up at once. First, a Jewish man applied for a job and was turned down since it was the Church's policy that they only hired Christians. And they fired a teacher when they discovered she was a practicing lesbian.
Now normally these two issues would not be a problem. Being a church organization, they are allowed to hire and fire according to that churches principles. Ah, but here is the catch. They were taking government money. 40% of their funds, and that amounts to over a million dollars a year, comes from tax dollars. And those tax dollars come from each and every one of us. How would YOU feel if you discovered your tax dollars were funding an institution that refused to hire blacks or hispanics?
The courts determined, and I think correctly, that any organization that takes money from the government is required to comply with government non-discrimination policies. They took money from all of us, so they have to hire all of us.
This forced the United Methodist Children's Home to make a choice. They could give up the money, or they could give up their unique Christian character. It was a million dollars. You can not serve both God and mammon. They chose mammon. Under the restrictions, not only will they have to hire indescriminantly, they agreed to stop requiring orphans to attend church, and to cease all religious instruction. And now, if a child in the home brings up issues about sexual orientation or gender identity, the United Methodist Children's Home has agreed to refer them to "appropriate" supportive services, such as to Youth Pride. (An organization dedicated to service and support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth.)
The "Methodist" children's home is now a secular institution.
And they are NOT an isolated case, and this process of the government pulling strings is nothing new. Back in 1989 the courts ruled that the Salvation Army could NOT fire a Wiccan, who distributed Satanic materials while working for them. The Salvation Army lost its religious hiring exemption because it accepted government money directly related to job of the lady being fired.
WHAT can the government accomplish for Christ's Church that the Church couldn't do better WITHOUT any so called "help"? In what way are we threatened by letting someone else make their own religious choices? It's the golden rule, let THEM choose how to worship (or not) for themselves so that WE will be allowed to worship God as we see fit.
Kilarin
"[T]he government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion, as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquility of Mussulmen; and... that no pretext, arising from religious opinions, shall ever produced an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries."
Treaty Between the United States and Tripoli, 1797, Article XI