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Gould,
Do you have a problem with a community who purchases and display non religious Xmas lights and/or Xmas trees on public property? "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... IF the majority of a particular town or community are of a certain religion, that they be allowed to celebrate their religious traditions IN PUBLIC, without having to deal with a few minorities who can't seem to exercise the same principle of tolerance, that they want applied to them. We absolutely agree on this item. When a religious group wants to preach or proselytize, they should be allowed to have a reasonable number of props on display during the time they are actively preaching or proselytizing. Take Xmas Decs, for example. This is always a contentious issue. I believe that Christian groups who want to preach about a Virgin birth, etc etc, are absolutely entitled to do so- and in public. While preaching, handing out tracts, conducting a public prayer session, or what not in a public place such as a city park, it could be appropriate to have plywood cutouts of angels, camels, shepherds, etc on hand to "set the stage". It is not appropriate to store these religious artifacts in public space or at public expense between prayer sessions or speeches. It is not appropriate for the city to condone a passive display of these items outside the active exercise of free speech. It is not appropriate for the common purse of the entire community to pay for religious icons for one particular sect or faith, regardless of the number of adherents that faith might claim in the community. I'm not a bible scholar. Trying to "interpret" what Christ was "actually" saying is akin to trying to figure out which side of an issue John Kerry was on at any given time. I'll leave that circular and endless debate to those who have nothing else to accomplish. Does your minister know that you consider Jesus as much a flip-flopper as John Kerry? :-) That was the wind-up, and here's the pitch: If the teachings of Jesus are open to interpretation rather than absolute, how can *any* nation, even one you fantasize to be a "Christian" nation, hope to use those teachings as a foundation for secular law? Shouldn't the law exist independently from any specific religious teaching, (Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Pagan, Wiccan, etc) and leave the spiritual aspects of life up to individual conscience and interpretation? How can we create laws and social structures based on Christian teachings, even in a "Christian nation", when Christians have been killing one another almost unceasingly for the last 2000 years over disagreements about what the teachings of Jesus actually meant? Even if 70, 80, 90, or even 99% of the people agree on a specific religious interpratation, there's no reason to write that interpretation into the law. Society will observe that premise, (whether it is that each student should begin the school day by reciting the Lord's Prayer, or that no woman should seek abortion for any reason, or that same sex persons should not couple), in *exactly* the same proportion as percentage of people who hold that view. Mission accomplished. |
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