K
KendraDZ1902
Guest
There are many in HoustonWhen we can build a Chapel in Saudi then I will support them building a Mosque in Texas
isgh.org/locations/
There are many in HoustonWhen we can build a Chapel in Saudi then I will support them building a Mosque in Texas
I wasn’t talking about women, I was talking about the unborn.The government made abortion legal, that doesn’t mean you HAVE to abort babies. Do you have any solid evidence that the government has rounded up women and forced abortions upon them? Or that they want to do this?
Well, you would have to round up the women to force abortions, since the unborn are inside of the women.I wasn’t talking about women, I was talking about the unborn.
I’m not saying there shouldn’t be precautions against extremists. I hope that more is done especially with the persecutions going on in the Middle East. I did not interpret the final comment on restricting population as being related to immigration, but if it is, then I don’t disagree that there should be work done to prevent terrorists or sympathizers from entering the country.I’m not advocating doing any more than is already being done by the FBI, CIA, and other agencies through current methods, both publicized and unpublicized. I am just frustrated by the lack of reporting of Muslim jihadists by other Muslims. I can only assume that peaceful Muslims either condone the actions of the jihadists or are afraid to try to prevent or report them. Peaceful Muslims who put the welfare of society ahead of the goals of terrorists make good citizens even if they are not Christian. I just wish there were more such folks out there because I hardly ever hear of them.
As mentioned previously, there are current methods already in place to keep an eye on suspected jihadists and other criminals. It just makes common sense to restrict/limit more immigration from countries known to have a noticeable jihadist sympathizer population in order to not be overwhelmed by the sheer numbers being monitored and to allow those who are truly suspects to receive the attention that is warranted.
Although it may sound morally high and mighty to pretend that Muslims are just another religion and they are benign in their aspirations and that Islam and Christianity are playing on a level playing field, that view does not reflect reality and does not reflect the stated goals of ISIS and other like-minded groups in the Middle East that are on a quest to conquer the world by force and convert everyone else to Islam by force and kill those who would prefer to keep their current faith.
Perhaps, if nothing changes, you might think differently when they come driving into your neighborhood one day years from now and tell you to convert or get your head cut off like they have done in Iraq, Syria, and other places. I would prefer to do something about it while we still can.
I wasn’t talking about forcing abortion but the legalization and promotion of it is, in a sense, targeting a segment of society (the unborn) and used the ‘rounding up’ statement as analogy. Perhaps we don’t see it that way because those human beings are invisible to us.Well, you would have to round up the women to force abortions, since the unborn are inside of the women.![]()
First, can you name one Founding Father who was a Deist? Just one? Because I don’t think any of them were Deists. I think they all believed that God is involved in human affairs, that prayer works, and that God rewards good behavior in this life and in the next. I don’t think Deists believe that stuff.Our Constitution is not Christian. It was composed by Deist Free Masons and is purely indifferent towards Christian Truth.
True, Pope Pius IX could not have been writing about religious liberty in the 21st century in 1864. But principles don’t change. Surely we can draw out maxims from this encyclical that can be applied to any situation regarding the liberty of one’s conscience and the role of the state in the regulation of personal liberties. Sure, this encyclical doesn’t address the particularities of our conversation, but I think the pope’s insights are useful here. And by no means is this the only place in Catholic Tradition where such wordage and the expression of such principles can be found.
“Liberty of conscience” in passage you cited means anarchy - a social system where all authority is removed and everyone lives exclusively by their own conscience.True, Pope Pius IX could not have been writing about religious liberty in the 21st century in 1864. But principles don’t change. Surely we can draw out maxims from this encyclical that can be applied to any situation regarding the liberty of one’s conscience and the role of the state in the regulation of personal liberties. Sure, this encyclical doesn’t address the particularities of our conversation, but I think the pope’s insights are useful here. And by no means is this the only place in Catholic Tradition where such wordage and the expression of such principles can be found.
Perhaps we could all use a fresh reading of Pope Leo XIII’s* Libertas Praestantissimum* and then reconvene this discussion.“Liberty of conscience” in passage you cited means anarchy - a social system where all authority is removed and everyone lives exclusively by their own conscience.
The encyclical condemns “an absolute liberty, which should be restrained by no authority whether ecclesiastical or civil.” Again, these mean anarchy.
The encyclical does not propose social constructs which give preference to the Catholic faith nor does it support placing roadblocks in front of other faiths. It simply condemns false liberty which is “restrained by no authority.” That’s all it says.
Every encyclical has a context. Most people don’t understand that an encyclical is written to a specific set of people facing a particular situation at a particular time in history. they have to be understood this way.
-Tim-
-Tim-
Members are free to discuss, dialogue, question, disagree with, and debate the doctrines and dogmas of both Catholicism and non-Catholic religions. However, all discourse must be civil and charitable.
Guidelines
For both Catholic and non-Catholic posters:
It is acceptable to question the doctrine or dogma of another’s faith
It is never acceptable to question the sincerity of an individual’s beliefs
Bringing up historical controversies peculiar to a particular religion should be done cautiously*
It is acceptable to discuss the effect the incident had on current policy or practice.
It is acceptable to seek the truth vs. commonly-held beliefs or conventional wisdom about actual events.
It is fallacious reasoning to use embarrassing incidents to claim that they “prove” a particular religion is false.
Expecting members of any Church to defend or answer for the excesses or extremism of bodies that have broken with it is a technique that has no merit and can’t be defended.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=791722These rules for posting are not open for debate.
I think that Hitler and Roosevelt were wrong to put innocent men, women and children in concentration camps and would vote against the Americans doing the same to all Muslims.There’s a poster on the WN sub-forum that advocates putting all Muslims in “internment camps”.
That was such an unCatholic statements. No all religions are true, geeeez!!We may think Catholicism is the Truth, but many, many others don’t. What person, currently on Earth, gets to decide? Again, you wouldn’t like it if a group decided to tell us that we aren’t preaching the truth, that we need to keep our mouths shut, and to stop building Catholic churches. What’s good for the goose is good for the gander. I don’t want to be told to keep my mouth shut, so I won’t tell others to. I tend to try to treat others like I would want to be treated…totally crazy, I know.
GOD decides!!One, you are just writing over me. I said who CURRENTLY on Earth gets to decide. Also, you can’t just go around yelling that something is true and that is it.
I have no indifference. I just believe in free will.
You fussing with me isn’t going to change my mind, ever.
The Chapel would have to be economically fruitful to get built, methinks. The Saudi government are all about money first, citizens later. It’s a sad fact.When we can build a Chapel in Saudi then I will support them building a Mosque in Texas
I agree with you.Jesus commanded us to make disciples of all nations but he didn’t say that we should force people or deny them the ability to do what they want.
And if any one will not receive you or listen to your words, shake off the dust from your feet as you leave that house or town. (Matthew 10:14)
This is exactly what Paul did.
But they shook off the dust from their feet against them, and went to Ico’nium. (Acts 13:51)
Paul was the greatest evangelist of all time. He argued with great intensity and often spoke very harshly, but at the end of the day he respected every human person’s right to freedom even if it meant that they were making a terrible choice.
And when they opposed and reviled him, he shook out his garments and said to them, "Your blood be upon your heads! I am innocent. From now on I will go to the Gentiles." (Acts 18:6)
Paul walked away and went to people who would listen. Acts of the Apostles is our model. Nowhere is it recorded in the Bible that the earliest Christians tried to change public policy in favor of Christianity, only that they tried to change hearts through love.
-Tim-