We Never Know
No Slack
"In God We Trust" being on money goes back to the civil war.Yea they can remove "In God we Trust" since the USSR is essentially gone and dissolved now.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
"In God We Trust" being on money goes back to the civil war.Yea they can remove "In God we Trust" since the USSR is essentially gone and dissolved now.
Yep on their two cent piece at the time and not on other currency. Reasons were for troop moral as far as I know.
The Founding Fathers were basically all Christians. Even the many deists were "Christian" deists. Christianity was the only game in town at the time.
Today is the 248th anniversary of the signing of Colonial America’s Declaration of Independence, which begins:
Then follows a l-o-n-g list of the Colonists’ grievances against the King of England, which I do not include here.
Then comes the the declaration of independence:
Then come the signatures of the men who signed the document.
I highlighted in bold the 4 references to a Deity from which the signers of the Declaration of Independence drew their authority.
There is no mention of Christianity in the Declaration of Independence, whose principal author, Thomas Jefferson, was a Deist.
Many of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were Free Masons.
The 4 references to Deity do not resemble Christian names for God.
Amendment 1, US Constitution:
The Founding Fathers were acutely aware of how governments in Europe and the British Isles had become one with the Church and had persecuted, imprisoned and killed “heretics”. The Founding Fathers did not want that to happen in America. Thus, Amendment 1’s, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof”.
After the Revolutionary War, the “Give me liberty, or give me death” signer of the Declaration of Independence, Patrick Henry, became the Governor of Virginia. He tried to get the Virginia Legislature to pass a law that effectively would make Christianity the state religion of Virgina. Thomas Jefferson and another signer of the Declaration of Independence, James Madison, who would become known as the Father of the Constitution and America’s 4th president, led the charge to defeat Patrick Henry's law.
Later, Jefferson cut out of his own Bible passages from the New Testament about things Jesus said, which Jefferson liked, and he made them into his own bible, which became known as The Jefferson Bible. The passages Jefferson liked were about living life differently, much easier to say than do.
Amendment 14, Section 1, US Constitution, made the Constitution and Amendments 1-10, known as the Bill of Rights, applicable to the States:
Every anti-abortionist I have known was a religious-right Christian. In the law is the doctrine, res ipsa loquitur, the thing speaks for itself.
Recently, Louisiana’s state legislature passed a law requiring The Ten Commandments to be displayed in Louisiana’s public schools. The Ten Commandments are part of the Jewish Scriptures and are in the Old Testament of Christendom’s Bible. How the 6 religious-right Justices on the US Supreme Court will rule on what Louisiana did is anyone’s guess.
Once upon a time, the Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, Roy Moore, a far-right Christian, had the 10 Commandments installed in the Alabama Supreme Court building in Montgomery, the state Capital. During the Civil War, Montgomery was the Capital of the Confederacy after it was moved there from Richmond, Virginia.
From Wikipedia:
Clinton McGee was my criminal law professor at the University of Alabama School of law. After graduating from that law school, McGee joined the US Army and was sent to Germany to defend Nazis during the Nuremberg Trials.He was so good at defending Nazis that he was shifted to prosecuting them and they didn’t get off.
Some years after I graduated from the University of Alabama School of Law, Roy Moore enrolled there. Professor McGee nick-named Moore, “Fruitcake”.
During my last semester in law school, my infant son died of sudden infant death syndrome, I was disheveled, unable to think clearly. Professor MeGee told me the law clerk of a US District Judge in Birmingham had quit in the middle of his term with the judge, and I might wish to contact that judge about being his law clerk.
I wrote the judge a letter. He replied, inviting me to come see him. I drove from Tuscaloosa to Birmingham and we met in his chambers and mostly we talked about ourselves and hunting and fishing. He offered me the job. I memorialized him in the first chapter of A Few Remarkable Alabama People I Have Known, “He used to drink moonshine.”
Judge W. Clarence W. Allgood also cussed and did not attend church, and was the most Godly man I ever knew. His graveside service at Elmwood Cemetery in Birmingham was attended my more people than I ever saw at a graveside service.
A Few Remarkable People I Have Known is a free read at the internet library, archive.org, which is run by American colleges. Here’s a link to the free read.
A Few Remarkable Alabama People I Have Known : Sloan Bashinky : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
It also can be read at this link:
Yeah, the Puritans and the Quakers really went at it in the early colonial times, with the Puritans literally physically torturing the Quakers, who later started protesting the Puritans' religious dominance and their persecutive ways.The Founding Fathers were basically all Christians. Even the many deists were "Christian" deists. Christianity was the only game in town at the time.
But their experience was that Christians didn't get along with Christians of other denominations. The bloody wars in Europe between Catholics and Protestants and among Protestants of different denominations were well in their memory. Many people in the states were there to escape religious persecution.
They knew that whenever a Christian fraction would gain power, they'd persecute all other Christians. That's why they didn't want Christians in power.
It didn't always work out (see the history of Mormons) but overall it worked pretty well.
Especially Christians who are not Baptist Nationalists should remember that lesson because they will suffer as much as any other group when the small group of extremists seize power.
Well said.The Founding Fathers were basically all Christians. Even the many deists were "Christian" deists. Christianity was the only game in town at the time.
But their experience was that Christians didn't get along with Christians of other denominations. The bloody wars in Europe between Catholics and Protestants and among Protestants of different denominations were well in their memory. Many people in the states were there to escape religious persecution.
They knew that whenever a Christian fraction would gain power, they'd persecute all other Christians. That's why they didn't want Christians in power.
It didn't always work out (see the history of Mormons) but overall it worked pretty well.
Especially Christians who are not Baptist Nationalists should remember that lesson because they will suffer as much as any other group when the small group of extremists seize power.
This thread is about what is written in it. Trump necessarily is included, since he stacked the US Supreme Court with religious-right Christians, who overturned Roe v. Wade, and he is selling Bibles and saying he loves the 10 Commandments and wants them in all schools, even though he violated all 10 Commandments, and Trump’s base is dead set on turning American into their version of a Christ9ian nation, which they may well pull off with the 6-3 majority on the US Supreme. Cost, so, if you read the history I provided, you saw the Founding Fathers didn’t want a national government controlled by religion, and they did their best to prevent that from happening.
The term separation of church and state is not even in the Constitution. That was a lawyer word game, that sugar coated corruption trying to bypass the intent of the Constitution. Moral people do not handle corruption as well as immoral or relative moral people. The thought was if you can overcome the moral people, by taking away their rights, you can give the immoral and relative moral an advantage; swamp.The Founding Fathers were basically all Christians. Even the many deists were "Christian" deists. Christianity was the only game in town at the time.
But their experience was that Christians didn't get along with Christians of other denominations. The bloody wars in Europe between Catholics and Protestants and among Protestants of different denominations were well in their memory. Many people in the states were there to escape religious persecution.
They knew that whenever a Christian fraction would gain power, they'd persecute all other Christians. That's why they didn't want Christians in power.
It didn't always work out (see the history of Mormons) but overall it worked pretty well.
Especially Christians who are not Baptist Nationalists should remember that lesson because they will suffer as much as any other group when the small group of extremists seize power.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
There are things in the rarely sung verses of that anthem that you don't want to come to light.It can also be found in the fourth (and rarely sung) verse of the Star Spangled Banner:
O thus be it ever when freemen shall stand
Between their lov'd home and the war's desolation!
Blest with vict'ry and peace may the heav'n rescued land
Praise the power that hath made and preserv'd us a nation!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto - "In God is our trust,"
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Like?There are things in the rarely sung verses of that anthem that you don't want to come to light.
Heh, and yet they put it on their money knowing Jesus said they could not worship God and mammon. Beside the cash register in the fabulous Harpoon Harry’s Diner in Key West is a sign on which is, “In God we trust, all others must pay cash.” Across from the cash register is an ATM machine.It can also be found in the fourth (and rarely sung) verse of the Star Spangled Banner:
O thus be it ever when freemen shall stand
Between their lov'd home and the war's desolation!
Blest with vict'ry and peace may the heav'n rescued land
Praise the power that hath made and preserv'd us a nation!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto - "In God is our trust,"
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
... and immediately started persecuting other Christians. The Founding Fathers didn't have to go back to England, which didn't control religion in the colonies as they did at home, they just had to look at their own people. Christians fighting Christians, and they didn't want their new country to take sides.The first Amendment places all the restrictions on the State, but not on religion or on the people.. This was in response to the King of England commandeering religion; state run religion. The first settlers came to America to escaped persecution by England's state run religion.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Parents, children, businesses, and political opponents are not safe under this regime.That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.
If we compare Government to all the religions in America, only the Government has the military, makes the laws, controls the justice system and has all the tax money. The religious are a loose confederation of citizen volunteers that meet once a week. The Government has the full over dog advantage. If the Government decided to play favorites or go no attack, they can use all that power to make it more than just a religious war. Government now wars against all religion, placing restrictions on religion such as displaying symbols. It adopted the Liberal Religion, with its weird Orthodoxy based on pronouns and godlessness.... and immediately started persecuting other Christians. The Founding Fathers didn't have to go back to England, which didn't control religion in the colonies as they did at home, they just had to look at their own people. Christians fighting Christians, and they didn't want their new country to take sides.
And for a good reason, because it violates the First Amendment.There is an uproar by the Left for the 10 Commandment being displayed in schools.
Wouldn't you say that the same would be true if they displayed the Eightfold Path, the Seven Tenets or the Rede?But if you think of it, if children got used to this higher law they would not be as disruptive as adults.
Heh, and yet they put it on their money knowing Jesus said they could not worship God and mammon. Beside the cash register in the fabulous Harpoon Harry’s Diner in Key West is a sign on which is, “In God we trust, all others must pay cash.” Across from the cash register is an ATM machine.
The eightfold path is too advanced for elementary school children. Adult have a hard time living it. The ten commandments is easier.And for a good reason, because it violates the First Amendment.
Wouldn't you say that the same would be true if they displayed the Eightfold Path, the Seven Tenets or the Rede?
But they choose the 10 Commandment, and they even limited it to a specific version. That is exactly what the Founding Fathers wanted to prevent, some Christians having privileges that other Christians and other religions don't have.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
What about the Seven Tenets and the Rede? They are even simpler than the 10 Commandments, so they would be even better.The eightfold path is too advanced for elementary school children. Adult have a hard time living it. The ten commandments is easier.
Why can't you stick to a topic? Do you have some mental condition that makes you go off on a tangent and rant about totally off-topic things?If you read the First Amendment, the wording restricts Congress, who makes all Federal Laws, but it does not restrict the people practicing any of these rights. It does not say free speech has to be politically correct. That was Government overreach. If I wanted to pray in school, with free speech, the Fed cannot endorse it or deny it. It has to butt out.
Those things not specifically specified as the role of Federal Government, such as your Religious war concerns, need to go back to the States. The States are closer to the people who live there. A nanny state can do something else. The Fed has no authority to do anything about this, but keeps trying to violate the Spirit of the Constitution. The city of New Orleans in Louisiana, is divided into Parishes, which is how the Catholic Church broke down the neighborhoods. The majority rules in Democracies, correct. It not a just a few bureaucrats or whiny cry babies, that get to decide; That was Big Government overreach; kill Democracy and majority rule using the whiny baby defense.
The idea that all religions have to have the same rights undermines Democracy and majority rule. It would be like saying in the fall elections, if one side wins the popular vote and the electoral vote, but one person who lost whines, nobody can win. We need to get rid of future election. That one whiny baby means more, right. The adult work around is to find where you are part of a majority decision and live there. That way you are free and others are free and majorities can rule.
What about the transgender pronouns and sex alternation orthodoxy. This is not backed by science. Gender disorders are considered pathology as are fixation with pronouns. This means since orthodoxy is not rational, it is imaginary like Atheism claims of all religion. The Department of Education may have to be disbanded and rebuilt from the bottom up, since it is very contaminated with sickness and lawlessness.
Congress is suppose to make Laws, but Con Artists in Government and Congress are using the regulatory state, to illegally make laws, that they themselves are not authorized to make, as defined by the Constitution. The Congress cannot establish the religion of sex change. They handed that off to the Department of Education and Indoctrination. The Supreme Court has just ruled to place limits on the authority of the regulatory state, which allows Big Government overreach and deniability by Congress. For now on, Congress will have to stand up and be counted on such matters and be made vulnerable at election time. They will reduced some to one face, instead of having the two faced option of today; say you are, against, and then order others to make a law, for.
Louisiana did not so much establish a religion, as it learned to finally but out, in terms of the local freedom of religion, in their schools. There is a difference when people get back their rights, compared to them being stolen by shady lawyers and Big Government.
People with any brains know that there are some restrictions that are the result, not of government, but of social norms. When I went to school, if I wanted to pray in class, first I had to get permission to speak at all. That's not monitored by the government, but by the teacher in the classroom. You want to pray in school, why not do it over your lunch -- in the lunchroom? And why does it have to be out loud -- you afraid God can't hear you otherwise?If you read the First Amendment, the wording restricts Congress, who makes all Federal Laws, but it does not restrict the people practicing any of these rights. It does not say free speech has to be politically correct. That was Government overreach. If I wanted to pray in school, with free speech, the Fed cannot endorse it or deny it. It has to butt out.