Mike Huckabee: U.S. moving toward 'criminalization of Christianity'

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Exactly. That is what the law is about. You not being able to legislate the way someone else lives in order to have the lives of others fall into compliance to the way you see it. Especially when others see it differently. The law allows you and I to be as Catholic as we like as long as we don’t interfere in any way with the manner in which others lawfully practice what they believe.

All the best
Gary
You are right. We owe the racists in the south who promoted segregation and Jim Crow laws an apology. Who were we to push our morality on them ? Let us never impose our morality on anyone else. Let racists discriminate. Let abortion clinics abort.

Moreover, there are people starving in Africa. Unless that starvation is completely eliminated we must not have a conversation about religious freedom in America.

Thanks for enlightening us, Gary.

Ishii
 
Does that even matter? Why does it matter?
It matters because from our perspective a homosexual marriage is an evil act. And we are not to participate in a homosexual marriage any more than we would be permitted to assist illegal drug dealer networks or sell stolen cars.

I know this might be a stretch for you to engage in, but that is how we see the proposed request to bake a cake for an evil mockery of marriage.
No one is stopping Catholics/other Christians/whomever from having a different understanding of marriage! Just that in a legal framework one understanding shouldn’t be preferenced. And given that not irregularly you read of churches/other catholic or Christian employers firing people for being in a SSM, or for having children outside of marriage, or in some other way somehow bizarrely affronting precious religious sensibilities - and such firing decisions being upheld - no one can hardly say that Christian understanding of anything is being remotely criminalised or persecuted.
I personally don’t agree with firing people simply because they are in a SSM, in fact I support the establishment of civil unions for gays, but not marriage.
 
Isn’t it the devil’s plan in the end times to criminalise Christianity especially Catholicism?

It is annoying but I feel it is happening everywhere that a thick fog is descending upon us.
 
You are right. We owe the racists in the south who promoted segregation and Jim Crow laws an apology. Who were we to push our morality on them ? Let us never impose our morality on anyone else. Let racists discriminate. Let abortion clinics abort.

Moreover, there are people starving in Africa. Unless that starvation is completely eliminated we must not have a conversation about religious freedom in America.

Thanks for enlightening us, Gary.

Ishii
Hi Ishii: This is another example of how social conservatives usually fall short on arguments. The problem is nuance and in the details. The laws that abolished segregation were not enacted based in law on morality. They were based on legal interpretations on constitutional guarantees of equality/anti discrimination. Those very same guarantees keep us from pushing the moralities of a particular religion on everyone else. In our current day, those same laws are being interpreted to mean that gay people can get married. Many churches are making the same decision, but the decision by churches is based on morality, not the same reasons as the law. Further, the law protects the practices of those churches from influence or coercion by churches like ours and vice versa.

All the best
Gary
 
Isn’t it the devil’s plan in the end times to criminalise Christianity especially Catholicism?

It is annoying but I feel it is happening everywhere that a thick fog is descending upon us.
There has never been a time where people didn’t say that the end times are near. Rest assured that the end of one thing always heralds the beginning of another thing. World without end as they say.

All the best
Gary
 
Isn’t it the devil’s plan in the end times to criminalise Christianity especially Catholicism?

It is annoying but I feel it is happening everywhere that a thick fog is descending upon us.
Since he can’t directly attack the church, he is using our government to attack us.
 
Since he can’t directly attack the church, he is using our government to attack us.
Exactly, and its being done in such a slow and methodical way, many many people are being fooled into falling for satans trick, but Jesus warned us that these times would come, should be no surprise really.

Also, those that try to say things like ‘there has always been signs of the end times in every generation’, while this is true, never before has so many signs, ALL at once happened as the times we are living in.

Im not sure of the exact book or verse, but isnt there something Jesus said about people who fail to see these warning signs, or try to brush them off as normal events? Im going to look that up.
 
You’re creating a specious distinction and certainly one that would have no legal merit. A wedding cake is a wedding cake. Take a look at some wedding cake designs online. Most do not even have toppers these days. There is absolutely nothing that would distinguish them as “gay” or “straight”. And if the couple wants two brides or two grooms on the top of the cake, they can provide it themselves. Most couples purchase the topper separately anyway if they even choose to have one.
Well if you take enough off any cake and it’s tough to tell any cake apart. But to your counterpoint, there is a huge distinction between a marriage and a faux marriage. And a cake celebrating one if much different from a cake celebrating a fake one.
 
I have stated before that my views on killing are more strict than the Church’s. Since my standard exceeds that of the Church, I do not need that point of reference. Besides, the laws that Jesus came to fulfill rather than replace included the injunction not to kill. I don;t see how this particular item in the bible can be understood too many ways.
Well it is understood in a couple of different ways, and one of those ways is how the Church understands it. The Church recognizes self defense and defense of the innocent as justifiable uses of force. The difference between your views and the Church’s should be noted.
I don’t recall that I stated a priority when I said that I support no form of killing, maiming or otherwise harming any living thing. It means what it says, and I’m not sure how I could be more clear.
But would you acknowledge a greater priority to the killing of 1 million innocent babies versus the killing of 35 convicted criminals? Is one a greater sin or not?
Pope Francis recently denounced the “new tyranny” of unfettered capitalism and calls inequality “the root of social evil.” Subject of another thread but I would welcome some discussion on it. I wonder what alternative he might be thinking about. I bet it’s a mixed economy of some sort. But it’s certainly not unfettered capitalism. That’s off the table.
Please point out where there is unfettered capitalism. A free market, capitalist economy is not unfettered.
I listen to all parties and make my own decisions. Catholic yes, but a modern human too.
Those qualifiers usually precede some departure from Church teaching. Is that the case for you? Are there Church teachings you reject?
The problem with that particular argument is that the purpose for which Peter had drawn his sword was in fact defense. Jesus and the 12 were not launching an assault on the Roman guards that night. The passage is clearly a statement about violence and weapons. So defense is off the table. Offer another argument and we’ll discuss that too.
The Church disagrees with your private, personal interpretation of this Scripture passage.
Rather than a matter of mental gymnastics, it’s only a simple matter of history really, but thank you for the vote of confidence anyway. I would offer that it requires a lack of historical context and knowledge of cultural syntax to be able to envision how a 1st century Palestinian Jew would have given a teaching on something that didn’t exist in fact or even in the minds of 1st century Palestinian Jews. The item of the day in Jewish Palestine was the number of wives a man had, and that is all.
This is a pretty weak argument. It boils down to Jesus being either too afraid to state what He “really” would have said, if He didn’t pick such backward and evil people to incarnate among 2000 years ago. Or it boils down to His teaching being too radical, as if Him telling people He was God and to eat His Body and drink His Blood was pretty blasé.
I think Charles Dickens spent a good deal of his life writing about private and church run institutions and programs for the poor. The problems with that approach are how the government stuff came about in the first place. For our Tea Party readers, Charles Dickens was a writer in 19th century England.
And now you’re going to try to insult the intelligence of those who disagree with you?
 
Good Afternoon Ishii: It’s a fictitious idea that the Pope and I made up that isn’t actually happening anywhere. Just ignore us. The whole thing is foolish.
Asking for an example of where unfettered capitalism is practiced now is too high a burden for you to complete?
Because the two Gospels you and I cited say two different things.
In your fallible opinion…
This is because they were written decades after Jesus was dead,
So is a book written today about the 1980’s unreliable? Should we throw out all books that weren’t written within 5 years of the events that happened? This is the weak argumentation of many ignorant atheists today.
by two different Greek speaking people who could read and write and who never met Jesus.
Luke didn’t meet Jesus. But Matthew and John were Apostles, and Mark was among the disciples.
And Greek is not thought to be the language of Jesus, nor for any Jews that were His contemporaries in Palestine.
Not relevant, but it was a fluent language of trade and of the learned class.
Jesus probably never met anyone who could read or write with the exception of perhaps Caiaphas and maybe Pilate, and they weren’t interested In His teachings. The skill was rare among Jesus’ population. This means that no one who could read or write probably ever heard the teachings of Jesus or saw His actions.
I seem to remember a tax collector being among His Apostles. Are you arguing that tax collectors couldn’t write? It was kinda important for the job requirements.
The closest any of these Gospel writers came to Jesus was Luke, who was actually probably a disciple of Paul, and Luke could read and write.
Matthew and John were Apostles. Mark was a disciple.
Paul of course could read and write as well, but never actually met Jesus during His lifetime or witnessed His deeds or His public ministries. This is important because Paul is Luke’s only link to Jesus.
This is a flat out laughable claim, and again, mirrors claims of ignorant atheists. Luke interviewed many for his gospel, as he notes in the introduction. There is strong evidence that Mary was one of those he interviewed.
It naturally follows, and we can clearly see of course that the bible has conflicting accounts.
Only in your fallible opinion.
Therefore, my point is that you can find something in the bible to support just about anything you want to say. People have been doing that for thousands of years.
Indeed. One could say your were doing that very thing here.
The passage I have cited about weapons is clearly in opposition to weapons and violence. The one you cited is clearly for weapons and violence.
In your fallible opinion…
Because of the problems I mentioned above, Jesus turns out to be a rather shapeable character with respect to just about any point you want to make. That is the historical and factual truth on the matter. Because of this, 20 centuries later, He has become the Stretch Armstrong of philosophical, religious and political debate.
No doubt. How do YOU know that you are not doing this very thing?
So we should stop Social Security and Medicare? These are the two largest entitlement programs in the United States.
At the very least we should change them fundamentally because they are insolvent and bankrupt now, and it will only get worse. The program is doomed as it stands.
 
Hi Ishii: This is another example of how social conservatives usually fall short on arguments. The problem is nuance and in the details. The laws that abolished segregation were not enacted based in law on morality. They were based on legal interpretations on constitutional guarantees of equality/anti discrimination. Those very same guarantees keep us from pushing the moralities of a particular religion on everyone else. In our current day, those same laws are being interpreted to mean that gay people can get married. Many churches are making the same decision, but the decision by churches is based on morality, not the same reasons as the law. Further, the law protects the practices of those churches from influence or coercion by churches like ours and vice versa.

All the best
Gary
Gary, if you ever take the time to study the civil rights movement which resulted in the decisions that abolished segregation (and I hope you do), you will find that it was initiated by Christian ministers and supported largely by Christians who believed that segregation / Jim Crow laws, etc. were unjust. The arguments in favor of civil rights were based on the inherent rights of blacks given by a creator. Have you ever read a speech by MLK? They are filled with references to God and justice and mostly grounded in the Old Testament - done in order to wake up the overwhelmingly Christian American people as to the injustice and inherently un-Christian nature of segregation. Without the support and participation of Christians, and arguments made based on Christian morality, it is hard to imagine segregation ending when it did.

On the other hand, based on your analysis, you need to make an apology to Bull connor (or his relatives) and the KKK for America pushing its religious morality on them. Then, you should go to MLK’s relatives and lecture them on not pushing religious morality on others to fight racism.

I hope this helps you to better understand this. Let me know if you have any questions.

Ishii
 
Good Evening RGCheek: I think your post gets to the core of what I see as the problem with this thread. We live in a democracy where much of the population doesn’t share a Catholic view on gay marriage. Some Christian denominations perform gay marriages. Atheists don’t care what Christianity says whatsoever on the matter. Hindus and Jews and Buddhists all have very different belief systems from the Catholic Church. What they all have in common is that they all pay taxes, they all serve to defend our country, they all do jobs that perform jobs that create goods and services for all of us. And that includes gay people. They pay taxes, many serve in the military, many have died on combat, serve on police forces, save our lives when we come to the emergency room, transport our broken bodies in ambulances to the hospital when we are sick or injured, and you are having a hissy fit because you might have to bake them a cake when they try to celebrate their lives like you do. As a fellow Catholic who lives in a democracy, all I can say is this is a very myopic view of the world we live in that you have there. It’s religious intolerance, and that is what this country has stood against since it’s inception. Gay people and people who believe differently than us aren’t attempting to trump Christianity as you have said. They have simply shown the audacity to try and live their lives on equal footing alongside people and institutions that have stomped on them for countless centuries. I applaud them, and if I could, I would bake a cake for every one of them. That is all I really have to say to people who share your view RGCheek.

And yes, I am a Catholic!

All the best
Gary
Error has no rights. People who believe in error have rights, but error itself has no rights. Society as a whole does not have to recognize the error of gay faux marriage as being the same as marriage. People in society can believe that if they wish, but society doesn’t have to pretend they are not in error, and doesn’t have to recognize such error.
 
It is up to me to voice what I think is the truth, yes. However, in a democratic society others have the right to voice what they think is the truth as well. It is not my place to legislate my Catholic morality on Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, Jains, Methodists and the rest, nor is it their right to force me to live my own life in a manner other than what I have chosen. This is what the discourse is about.

All the best
Gary
Someone’s morality always wins out. There is no vacuum. So who’s will it be?
 
In America does it mean that certain states in America would criminalise Christianity first (hypothetical) or would the entire nation criminalise it at the same time?
 
In America does it mean that certain states in America would criminalise Christianity first (hypothetical) or would the entire nation criminalise it at the same time?
No need to criminalize Christianity in itself. That would be too direct. One begins by criminalizing Christians acting on their beliefs, such as refusing to participate in same sex weddings or refusing to provide contraceptive or abortifacient services under the guise of ‘health care.’ In Canada one can get into trouble with human rights tribunals merely by directly enunciating Catholic teachings regarding same sex marriage or same sex sexual activity. (That would be classified as prosecutable ‘hate speech,’ I suppose.

Catholic adoption agencies have had to close because they will not place children with same sex couples. Doing so violates Catholic doctrine and is harmful to children. Not doing so results in violation of ‘non-discrimination’ laws.

It may come to the point where one can be Catholic and think Catholic, but not speak Catholic or act Catholic or do Catholicism in practice because it would be illegal.
 
Gary, if you ever take the time to study the civil rights movement which resulted in the decisions that abolished segregation (and I hope you do), you will find that it was initiated by Christian ministers and supported largely by Christians who believed that segregation / Jim Crow laws, etc. were unjust. The arguments in favor of civil rights were based on the inherent rights of blacks given by a creator. Have you ever read a speech by MLK? They are filled with references to God and justice and mostly grounded in the Old Testament - done in order to wake up the overwhelmingly Christian American people as to the injustice and inherently un-Christian nature of segregation. Without the support and participation of Christians, and arguments made based on Christian morality, it is hard to imagine segregation ending when it did.

On the other hand, based on your analysis, you need to make an apology to Bull connor (or his relatives) and the KKK for America pushing its religious morality on them. Then, you should go to MLK’s relatives and lecture them on not pushing religious morality on others to fight racism.

I hope this helps you to better understand this. Let me know if you have any questions.

Ishii
What you say Ishii is of course absolutely correct, but it’s worth pointing out that the civil rights movement was not really about Christianity, merely heavily informed by it. (Also, there were a not insignificant number of ministers who supported segregation as well, but that doesn’t mean that the majority were not opposed to it). But it was (is) about treating all men and women as equals.

Now, it seems to me, that the way the majority of the proponents of SSM would probably characterise their own struggle (as they see it anyway) in very similar terms… We don’t have to agree with them but that is the parallel trying to be drawn.
 
From zz912:
Well it is understood in a couple of different ways, and one of those ways is how the Church understands it. The Church recognizes self defense and defense of the innocent as justifiable uses of force. The difference between your views and the Church’s should be noted.
I have already explained in a good deal of detail how the words of Jesus can be and have been used to make just about any point you like. I have already pointed out that my opinion on the matter is different than the Church’s, however, I am relatively certain that my disinclination to carry weapons is not in conflict with the Church. Are you suggesting that I am required to carry a weapon to be a Catholic?
But would you acknowledge a greater priority to the killing of 1 million innocent babies versus the killing of 35 convicted criminals? Is one a greater sin or not?
It would take about 5 or 6 years of study for you to understand how it is that I do not place a numeric value on life.
Please point out where there is unfettered capitalism. A free market, capitalist economy is not unfettered.
Have you taken the time to read the Pope’s statement on this or have you not? Or are you going to invoke the customary “selective infallibility” clause oft times used on CAF, wherein he who is guided by the Holy Spirit through Apostolic Succession is infallible on matters relating to the Magisterium, but can’t necessarily be trusted to apply any of it to practical day to day matters, especially when his opinions differ with yours? Personally, I think the Pope is truly guided by God, and I very much take what he says seriously. Read up on what he has to say and check back with me. I’m not here to do your legwork.
Those qualifiers usually precede some departure from Church teaching. Is that the case for you? Are there Church teachings you reject?
Name an area where my interpretations have caused me to live in a manner that is in conflict with the teachings of the Church and we’ll discuss it. Be specific. Is it valuing the lives of convicts as much as those of fetuses, my refusal to say that ten lives are more important than one, or my lack of desire to carry a weapon? Explain it and we’ll discuss it.
This is a pretty weak argument. It boils down to Jesus being either too afraid to state what He “really” would have said, if He didn’t pick such backward and evil people to incarnate among 2000 years ago. Or it boils down to His teaching being too radical, as if Him telling people He was God and to eat His Body and drink His Blood was pretty blasé.
Maybe He just figured that He was clear enough on the matter.
And now you’re going to try to insult the intelligence of those who disagree with you.
Are you feeling insulted?

All the best,
Gary
 
No need to criminalize Christianity in itself. That would be too direct. One begins by criminalizing Christians acting on their beliefs, such as refusing to participate in same sex weddings or refusing to provide contraceptive or abortifacient services under the guise of ‘health care.’ In Canada one can get into trouble with human rights tribunals merely by directly enunciating Catholic teachings regarding same sex marriage or same sex sexual activity. (That would be classified as prosecutable ‘hate speech,’ I suppose.

Catholic adoption agencies have had to close because they will not place children with same sex couples. Doing so violates Catholic doctrine and is harmful to children. Not doing so results in violation of ‘non-discrimination’ laws.

It may come to the point where one can be Catholic and think Catholic, but not speak Catholic or act Catholic or do Catholicism in practice because it would be illegal.
👍👍👍

Very well stated.
 
What you say Ishii is of course absolutely correct, but it’s worth pointing out that the civil rights movement was not really about Christianity, merely heavily informed by it.
The Civil Rights movement would not have been successful if the clergy of US Christian denominations were not nearly universal in their condemnation of racism and segregation by race and that had not had a huge resonance with their membership in the pews.

The current effort to push SSM is coming from the secular elites, not the pews.
 
The Civil Rights movement would not have been successful if the clergy of US Christian denominations were not nearly universal in their condemnation of racism and segregation by race and that had not had a huge resonance with their membership in the pews.
Oh I’m not disputing that at all! And thank goodness for the efforts of the various churches!
The current effort to push SSM is coming from the secular elites, not the pews.
I don’t know if it’s true to say it comes from a secular ‘elite’ (seems it’s too broad a movement to call an ‘elite’, but I don’t want to split hairs, as it’s not really important)…but I’d agree is it on the whole secular (which isn’t to say some denominations or churches/groups within other faiths aren’t much more liberal in this regard than others).

But I’m sure either way that whether or not it’s a secular or religiously-informed movement (like or unlike the characterisation of the Civil Rights movement), the parallel could stand. Those in favour of it are arguing for what they see as a right to basic fairness and equality. This is exactly what the Civil Rights movement was about, although the direct goals (voting rights reform, ending segregation, etc) were obviously different.

Now we can disagree (actually, I think we probably agree!) about the morality of one movement versus the other, but it’s entirely fair to say that from the internal frame of reference from both movements, they were essentially after the same thing.
 
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