Christianity has completely disavowed White Supremacy. They actively preach against it.
Not so. Some perhaps, but it's a big church with a lot of different Christians with a lot of different ideologies including white supremacists speaking on its behalf. What fraction of the white supremacists marching at Charlottesville do you suppose were Christian? Three-fourths? What fraction were secular humanists? Zero?
I notice that you steadfastly refused to even try to present any evidence of a war on Christianity by the American left, much of which is Christian, no doubt because you have none, but haven't retracted your claim. I accept that as your concession that you have no such evidence, since you would have been highly motivated to post it if it existed.
I believe that by your standards, I am more that free to claim that you and the people that feed you your anti-liberal bigotry, which you assimilate passively and uncritically, and then volunteer to serve as a vector to spread, have declared war on America's left.
Who do you think is burning and shooting up churches, synagogues, and mosques? Not liberals.
"The second Scriptural viewpoint overwhelmingly embraced by most Americans during the Revolutionary Era was that God would not honor an offensive war, but that He did permit civil self-defense (e.g.,
Nehemiah 4:13-14 & 20-21,
Zechariah 9:8,
2 Samuel 10:12, etc.). The fact that the American Revolution was an act of self-defense and was not an offensive war undertaken by the Americans remained a point of frequent spiritual appeal for the Founding Fathers." I've made my case - from scripture. If you're still hot under the collar about it then go vent to somebody else. I'm done with trying to reason with you.
Your case was rejected because you didn't adequately address these
:
- "Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established. The authorities that exist have been established by God. Consequently, whoever rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and those who do so will bring judgment on themselves."- Romans 13:1-2
- "Remind them to be submissive to rulers and authorities, to be obedient" - Titus 3:1
If one is literate in English, these are very simple declarative statements to understand, so simple that they were no doubt a problem for those promoting revolution against a God-appointed and God-anointed king to a mostly Bible-reading Christian population, and undoubtedly the reason for giving lip service to rights endowed by a creator, newly-minted rights for that occasion.
And you are doing something similar by deflecting to Old Testament scripture trying to justify rebellion as self-defense against a government. I only looked at the first one, Nehemiah 4:13-14, which is irrelevant, since it refers to defending oneself from foreign invaders who prefer that there be holes in the walls of their city. The American revolutionaries simply objected the their king taking so much of the fruits of their labors in taxes without giving them fair representation at court or parliament. The Bible is clear that Christians are expected to submit to the king no matter what, just as man is commanded to submit to God, woman to husband, and slave to master.
It's usually Christian apologists playing the role you're playing here trying to sanitize scripture to make it the moral, historically accurate, and logically coherent account that they want it to be, but is not. The unbeliever is free to treat what he sees in the book at face value, even if that means to consider the scripture wrong or contradicted elsewhere by other scripture, or to deem various acts including those ascribed to the Christian god as immoral or irrational, as with the story of Noah or the story of Job. The unbeliever will give you a more accurate report of what scripture says however incoherent it is because he has no motivation to change that.
If you had read the article instead of giving it the bum's rush you would have seen that the arguments made were based on SCRIPTURAL PRINCIPLES.
Many of us are not interested in reading the arguments of people not present to defend them. If one agrees with the author, it is your argument as well. If you don't want to make it yourself, then don't, but don't expect others to care enough to look at something that you don't care enough to paraphrase or summarize.
I've lost count of how many times in the past I did that only to discover that whoever left the orphan link (orphan because it is not offered in support of an argument, but in lieu of one) didn't actually read the article, or read it but misunderstood it and now can't rebut the rebuttal to the piece, or the paragraphs responded to on RF wasn't the part of interest to the link poster, and your response is irrelevant to his point that he never made.