Once again the State religion of Atheistic Secularism is being forced on people.
"The problem with being privileged your whole life is that because you have had that privilege for so long, equality starts to look like oppression." - Mark Caddo
Relevance?
The relevance is that many Christians these days are complaining of oppression because they are not free to impose their religion on others.
How To Determine If Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened In Just 8 Quick Questions
Adapted from How to Determine If Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened in Just 10 Quick Questions | HuffPost
Pick "A" or "B" for each question..
1. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not legally allowed to marry the person I love because of somebody else's religious preferences.
B) Some states refuse to enforce my own particular religious beliefs on marriage on those two guys in line down at the courthouse.
2. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am being forced to use birth control.
B) I am unable to force others to not use birth control.
3. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to teach my children the creation stories of our faith at home.
B) Public schools won't permit my faith to inject its creation myths into science classes.
4. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to pray privately.
B) I am not allowed to force others to pray the prayers of my faith publicly.
5. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) Being a member of my faith means that I can be bullied without legal recourse.
B) I am no longer allowed to use my faith to bully gay kids with impunity.
6. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to purchase, read or possess religious books or material.
B) Others are allowed to have access books, movies and websites that I do not approve of.
7. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) My religious group is not allowed equal protection under the establishment clause.
B) My religious group is not allowed to use public funds, buildings and resources to promote itself
8. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) Another religious group has been declared the official faith of my country.
B) My own religious group is not given status as the official faith of my country.
Scoring key:
If you answered "A" to any question, then perhaps your religious liberty is indeed at stake. You and your faith group have every right to now advocate for equal protection under the law. But just remember this one little constitutional concept: this means you can fight for your equality -- not your superiority.
If you answered "B" to any question, then not only is your religious liberty not at stake, but there is a strong chance that you are oppressing the religious liberties of others. This is the point where I would invite you to refer back to the tenets of your faith, especially the ones about your neighbors.
Adapted from How to Determine If Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened in Just 10 Quick Questions | HuffPost
Pick "A" or "B" for each question..
1. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not legally allowed to marry the person I love because of somebody else's religious preferences.
B) Some states refuse to enforce my own particular religious beliefs on marriage on those two guys in line down at the courthouse.
2. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am being forced to use birth control.
B) I am unable to force others to not use birth control.
3. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to teach my children the creation stories of our faith at home.
B) Public schools won't permit my faith to inject its creation myths into science classes.
4. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to pray privately.
B) I am not allowed to force others to pray the prayers of my faith publicly.
5. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) Being a member of my faith means that I can be bullied without legal recourse.
B) I am no longer allowed to use my faith to bully gay kids with impunity.
6. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) I am not allowed to purchase, read or possess religious books or material.
B) Others are allowed to have access books, movies and websites that I do not approve of.
7. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) My religious group is not allowed equal protection under the establishment clause.
B) My religious group is not allowed to use public funds, buildings and resources to promote itself
8. My religious liberty is at risk because:
A) Another religious group has been declared the official faith of my country.
B) My own religious group is not given status as the official faith of my country.
Scoring key:
If you answered "A" to any question, then perhaps your religious liberty is indeed at stake. You and your faith group have every right to now advocate for equal protection under the law. But just remember this one little constitutional concept: this means you can fight for your equality -- not your superiority.
If you answered "B" to any question, then not only is your religious liberty not at stake, but there is a strong chance that you are oppressing the religious liberties of others. This is the point where I would invite you to refer back to the tenets of your faith, especially the ones about your neighbors.
So, at one time, was alchemy and astrology thought of as science and indoctrinated to the young and impressionable.
Science is a method and the body of knowledge generated by that method, a method based on rational skepticism and empiricism.
Alchemy and astrology are faith based systems, not science, which is why they have to be indoctrinated rather than dispassionately presented as evolution is, and why they have been so sterile.
They eventually grew out of it like they will undoubtedly grow out of the failed metaphysical experimentation of so called evolution.
Evolutionary science is very healthy and, short of a falsifying discovery, here to stay.
What's failed is the religious challenge to it. The ID movement has wasted thousands of man-hours and millions of dollars looking for a god that they have no good reason to believe exists. That's not science. It's pseudoscience. Not surprisingly, it has generated no evidence for an intelligent designer. It's been as sterile a line of pursuit as alchemy and astrology, and for the same reason.
Face the facts while you still can, or is it too late for you as well?
Yes, it's too late for me to ignore the facts. I can no longer engage in faith-based thinking as I could as a child and as a Christian. I need a sound reason to believe anything now, and can't see ever returning to a way of thinking that allows one to believe anything at all or its polar opposite. How can such a method possibly be a path to truth?
One could believe evolutionary science or creationism by that method, which is essentially guessing, but only evolution if one's approach to deciding what is true about the world is reason and evidence based. If you guess wrong, expect reality to contradict you.
That should be a good indicator that the guess is wrong, but only if one notices that the evidence supports the other choice, which is kind of the problem for the faith-based thinker in the first place. He doesn't collect evidence and make decisions based on it, but rather, guesses and then sifts through the evidence looking for support for his guess while ignoring the evidence that suggests that he has guessed incorrectly.
Guess correctly, and it will be smooth sailing. Reality will confirm that you have guessed correctly by being in accord with that guess.
The same applies when guessing about gods. Guess correctly, and there will be no conflicting evidence. Guess incorrectly, and get ready for a lifetime of apologetics explaining why one's god behaves as if it doesn't exist.
Likewise with alchemy and astrology. They were guesses believed by faith, and wrong guesses at that, so naturally, reality didn't cooperate as hoped.
careful, it may be you who must adapt.
Adapt to what? The church has had to adapt many times to advances in science and humanistic ethics, not the other way around.
Or perhaps you were referring to American atheists adapting to theocratic tendencies there. You mentioned money and organization. If so, that's already been taken care of. I don't live in the States. But yes, people living there may need to adapt. They may need to go abroad for abortions, for example.