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#1 |
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Banned
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Well as long as I'm called a Socialist because I think the law is more important than religion, based solely on the actions of Christians throughout history....expect me to respond.
As long as people defend the actions of criminals because they don't possess the ability to see the implications through their holier than thou glasses.....expect me to respond. As long as I am accused of trying to take religion out of the equation when all I have done is point fingers at convicted criminals and defend the law....expect me to respond. I understand the point you are making Rough Rider. My point is that I won't stand aside and let their lies and propaganda inadvertently influence someone because they were never told the truth. |
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#2 |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 4,421
Rep Power: 340
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Could it be because of what is said in the big 10 ?
Maybe people do not like the 10 Commandments because it walks on everybody's toes.
From adultery to thou shall not kill ? Isaac |
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#3 |
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Advanced Member
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 261
Rep Power: 251
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It is amazing to me that the majority doesn't rule, it's those who have the biggest mouth. If the commandents are the basis of law and under god we trust is printed on money, Don't use them and see how far you get....
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#4 | |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2006
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Judge Roy Moore is a patriot
Quote:
Isaac |
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#5 |
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Banned
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He's a common criminal and deserves to do time for being a habitual offender.
Of course, Christians understand equality about as well as nuclear science.... |
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#6 | |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2006
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Quote:
Yet that is not how the ‘no establishment’ clause is interpreted today. It is invoked as an absolute command against religion in the public arena throughout the Union, and as authority for the radical secularization of all social institutions that depend upon the state, or which exercise an authority that derives from the state. It has been regarded as a violation of the ‘no establishment’ clause that a court should display the Ten Commandments, or that public schools should begin the day with prayers. Such decisions do not convey a desire to protect religious freedom, but a desire to marginalize religion – indeed, to deprive religion of the place that it naturally demands in the public life of a Christian nation. Nobody was forcing children to take part in the public prayers at school, or forcing anyone to genuflect before the Ten Commandments in the courtroom. Yet there are currents of opinion in America which do not only take offence at school prayers and doctrinal icons, but which believe that it is part of the spirit of democratic freedom to forbid them. Religion, for such people, is not just a private affair: it is something to be privatised, to be confined within the home like some shameful habit that cannot be displayed in public. It might reasonably be objected that religious freedom, so defined, is actually a forbidding of religion, since it removes the freedom to practice religion in the way that faith demands: in other words, the first part of the ‘no establishment’ clause, strictly interpreted, enters into conflict with the second. The principal demand that the Christian religion makes of its adherents is that they should bear witness to the faith in their life and work, and that they should invite others to join them in worship and prayer. If those things are forbidden, then it is difficult to see that American citizens really are free to be Christians. I think this point bears heavily on the situation of teachers in public schools, many of whom find themselves in the position of being the sole educative influence on children who are not going to obtain the good news of their salvation from any other source. Isaac Last edited by Isaac-Saxxon; 04-07-2007 at 12:42 PM. |
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#7 |
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SBLive! Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2006
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America the Beautiful,
or so you used to be. Land of the Pilgrims' pride; I'm glad they'll never see. Babies piled in dumpsters, Abortion on demand, Oh, sweet land of liberty; your house is on the sand. Our children wander aimlessly poisoned by cocaine choosing to indulge their lusts, when God has said abstain Judge Roy Moore ![]() |
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