For all the ways we like to bash our nation and leaders, I still like living here better than just about any place in the world. I think we get taxed too much, and I also think that the people we elect to be stewards of our financial contribution spend it way too foolishly, from the Feds right down to the local town council. You can't please everybody, so our budgets wind up somewhere in the middle give or take a few extra liberals or conservatives. As much of a left leaner as I am, I'd hate to see Cadillac social programs at the expense of unsafe bridges, or decreases in public safety. I think having 2 strong political ideologies to balance each other was exactly what the founding fathers had in mind, and I'm OK with that.
Back through the early years of this country as a collection of colonies, one idea bound the residents together; there should be no established national religion. This idea was so strong, that when we first broke away from Great Britain it was incorporated into the Constitution. Those early settlers here had witnessed first hand what having an "official" religion had done to England through history. A modern day parallel seems to be the nations which are Muslim and have a system of sharia law which is open to the interpretation of religious scholars. Doesn't matter whether you're muslim or not, you have to follow their moral code or be subject to Islamic justice. Christians have suffered for years in primarily Islamic societies, even those that are more modern and tolerant than others.
I'm a Christian. I believe that Jesus Christ was sent to establish the Lord's kingdom on Earth as the one true Son of God. That is my personal faith, and I struggle daily to live up to His code of conduct. In these United States, we are guaranteed the right to worship and live as Christians and the many different assemblies (Protestant, Catholic, Pentecostal) who all worship Christ.
I think that sometimes we twist history a bit and make a lot of assumptions about the founding fathers' stand on faith. More than a few times, I've heard Christian leaders exalt how we were founded as a "Christian" nation. It's true that most of our laws are based on Mosaic law as most of the founding fathers observed Christianity. I think if you read the First Amendment closely the words saying Congress shall "making no law establishing a religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof", you really can't glean more than 2 facts; Congress shall not establish a "state" religion, and shall not pass a law prohibiting any other religion.
Therefore, except for the "body of Christ" within this country we are in fact not a Christian nation. We are, in fact a nation of many religions; to each his own. To say otherwise would put us in the same light worldwide that Muslim nations under sharia law are viewed by the Christian world.
Christianity is not a nation. It's the heart of a number of individuals who profess their personal savior as individual parts of the "body of Christ". Part of this message clearly stated in the New Testament includes humility, forgiveness, tolerance, and a lot of other stuff that we find hardest to do when someone provokes us to anger, or causes us personal harm.
Since 9/11 there has been a growing fear of Islam and a number of malicious verbal and violent attacks on those who observe it. I can only hope that people who have righteous anger at the KKK, and American Nazi party (both of which embrace "christianity") don't view my faith in the same light as the radical muslim extremists who practice a violent offshoot of what is basically a peaceful religion.
There's a lot in the news lately about a planned mosque to be built roughly a quarter mile away from Ground Zero. Reaction has been a lot of hysteria, anger, media hype, and most prevalent; political maneuvering. There were practicing muslims who actually were victims of the 9/11 attacks.
Personally, I question the wisdom of Islamic leaders in choosing this particular spot to build. On the other hand, there's little anyone of Islamic faith could do right now that isn't under media scrutiny. A muslim could probably lynch a convicted pedophile and somehow there'd be a terrorist spin put on it.
In closing I'll say this. While Christian, and American, you can't just hold up the Constitution for protection when it suits you any more than you can profess a love for Christ whenever comfortable. In this nation, anyone has the right to build a house of worship wherever they can obtain the property. Regardless of that faith.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
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Tim, I can certainly tell that we fell off the same tree. I agreed with what you wrote yesterday about immigration and I agree with this post. Also, I am known for pointing out quite often that "the Emperor has no clothes."
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking time to write things that I'm too lazy to write.
LOL well, I guess being "in the trenches" with folks who suffer because of their ethnicity, or economic status had caused me to lean left of center. I can't help but think there's better things we could do with a billion dollars than build another missile silo. On a daily basis, I see folks who can't get insurance authorization or medicare remibursement for medications they need to live a full, optimal life. With our defense system, and nuclear arsenal, we could literally destroy the world. How about funneling some of that to folks that aren't as fortunate as the rest of society?
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