metis
aged ecumenical anthropologist
There are limits to that based on the 1st Amendment.why can't a land filled with Christians establish the type of society they want to?
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There are limits to that based on the 1st Amendment.why can't a land filled with Christians establish the type of society they want to?
Playing semantic games is impolite. But I understand why you skirt the question which invokes fear in non-Christians.
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.
2 Corinthians 3:17
It seems a secular holiday for most people here.Do..do you guys not have Christmas holidays?
It's always the Democrats that are to blame for it too!Some people just want to be offended over something, I suppose
Let me ask you this simple question; why can't a land filled with Christians establish the type of society they want to?
There are limits to that based on the 1st Amendment.
That’s what I had assumedIt seems a secular holiday for most people here.
Really? How oddIt's always the Democrats that are to blame for it too!
Another slick trick to keep the bovine's in line and voting Republican. (lesser of 2 evils)
Hmm, then I wonder why they set up a secular Constitution.
Secularists today suppose there is too thin a line between any kind of religious relationship with government and a theocracy. NOTE: The Office of the Chaplain has been part of the House of Representatives since the Founding. 100% of the Chaplains for over 230 years have been Christian. So, obviously, the Founding Father's idea that the Constitution did not over-ride the basic Christian nation who established it. How else do you reconcile the prohibition against establishing a religion (1A) and the Office of the Chaplain?
Right, its not Jesus death but our own death on the cross that stops us from sinning -- and defeats Satan --- and brings healing to the world. Like Jesus taught. The absence of that healing can only be our own fault for not denying ourselves. Almost none of us does as far as I can see. We plainly ignore the bulk of Jesus advice. The problems that you and I keep failing to resolve through laws are the kind that the world can't solve. Hence abortion is our own fault not for failing to pass the correct laws but for failing to be who we claim. Why did prohibition fail? Why are there still all kinds of murders and wars? That, too, is on us. We try to stop them with diplomacy, with money, with fighting, with arguments...anything but self denial. Anything but what Jesus says is required, that is what we do. We have to have our comforts, our me time, our own families, own children, own paths, own careers etc. Its all about self realization. Or am I mistaken about that?Jesus death on the cross does not necessarily stop people from sinning.
This fact does not justify people claiming Jesus was not good for religion or religious liberty.
This not being taught by most Christians, so of course our country is going to continue to have problems with excess orphans and questions about abortion will naturally arise.
To be fair it appears to command Adam to do that, not everybody. Jews seem to think that the command to Adam applies to themselves, which is within their purview to think; but if Adam is told to jump off a bridge are they going to do that, too? No, they are not. I think. Nevertheless there are no bridges in the Bible.The bible says to be fruitful and multiply. Nature however, in crowning us the alpha animal on the food chain, would implore us then to barely replace ourselves. We ring her round with a chain of human bodies at our own peril
I have decided not to worry myself about over population. There are different ways of looking at it, and I don't have any children. One way to look at it is that the more of us there are, the more likely the species is to survive when the next major extinction level event comes. We don't know when something will start killing us, such as a mutant ant or a sun flare or a super volcano. It could be almost anything. Maybe some mischievous teen lets loose a swarm of killer robots? We are already far, far more populous than Economists and others thought possible. Its all in the Maths, but we're pretty driven to multiply. Theoretically we can keep going if we keep improving our food supply, get rid of asphalt roads and decentralize our infrastructure. I think we could, using smart methods, double or triple the current population. That's not based on data but seems true to me.Nature however, in crowning us the alpha animal on the food chain, would implore us then to barely replace ourselves. We ring her round with a chain of human bodies at our own peril
To be fair it appears to command Adam to do that, not everybody.
Did you know that there are no bridges in the Bible? Its true. There is not a single bridge. People always use fords, paths or roads.
And don't say "Rainbows." They don't count.
I have decided not to worry myself about over population.
The basis of the 1st Amendment was not to make us a theocracy but to prevent us from making a theocracy, and this should be well known since so many of our founding fathers left Europe to come here seeking religious freedom.NOTE: My question forms the basis of the 1A. Moreover, the 1A text is far less restrictive than anti-Christians want to suppose.
The basis of the 1st Amendment was not to make us a theocracy
It is allowed because it does not pertain to any one denomination or religion.Is the establishment of the Office of the Chaplain indicative of a theocracy?
So? The Constitution came long after we became a nation per the Second Continental Congress.Beyond that, are you aware that several of the States, as Colonies had, in fact established religions?
The Bill of Rights pertains to all states, thus not just dealing with the federal government.And the 1A does not restrict the States in this regard; it only restricts the Creature of the Sovereign State compact.
It is allowed because it does not pertain to any one denomination or religion.
So? The Constitution came long after we became a nation per the Second Continental Congress.
The Bill of Rights pertains to all states, thus not just dealing with the federal government.
Did you notice none of them had official religions after the Constitution?Today's secularists falsely equate a State sponsored religion with a theocracy. Is the establishment of the Office of the Chaplain indicative of a theocracy? If not, why not? Where do you draw the line?
Beyond that, are you aware that several of the States, as Colonies had, in fact established religions? All were Christian religions. And the 1A does not restrict the States in this regard; it only restricts the Creature of the Sovereign State compact.
So, a government department that IS religious but not a theocracy, right? In practice, the Office of the Chaplain is ALL Christian. That means nothing to you?
You will find that it does. Guess who interprets the Constitution legally in the US? Not you. Not me. But the SCOTUS. They do not appear to agree with you.We are not a homogenous nation but a collection of Sovereign States in a federation. See 10A.
True but irrelevant to the point. The 1A restricts Congress only. The 1A does not restrict the Sovereign States.
That's not an official office designated by the Constitution, and people as early as James Madison have been opposed to such a thing based on them being unconstitutional.So, a government department that IS religious but not a theocracy, right? In practice, the Office of the Chaplain is ALL Christian. That means nothing to you?