I think the examples of Mao and Stalin make excellent arguments for the need to separate church and state. No, even something more basic than that, the need to keep out of government hands any agenda or tools which would allow it to dictate a person’s relationship with the divine, whether that be the state and its figureheads or even a church loved by a majority of the land’s people. If your faith is freely chosen, it is indeed “obedience to the joyous teachings” of the church. If it is not freely chosen but merely enforced in law by a government, it is a tyranny plain and simple.
Hi kenofken,
Thank you for your reply(even if you have lumped me in with another poster’s comments)
No matter how you dress up your separation of Church/state argument it is merely an anti-relgious rant at the end of the day. The Church is duty-bound to argue for the moral rights of the individual under God. Do you really believe that the present Church is a potential (if not full-blown) tyrant because it speaks up for social justice around the world?
If people don’t like my pointing out historical parallels with other civil rights struggles, tough. History is full of inconvenient parallels, and dismissing them, or me won’t remove the stain. It’s not a matter of equating Christianity with racism and the fact that you may have better intentions in your heart than the guys who threw bricks at King’s marchers also has nothing to do with it. The motivations are almost immaterial. Every argument used to deny gay people equal right was used, word for word, syllable for syllable by opponents of racial integration and intermarriage. All of it was done a stone’s throw from my lifetime and well within the lifetime of most of the people reading here, I suspect.
I am not au fait with every “word for word, syllable for syllable” argument in those cases you instanced but what I do know and will vehemently argue for is love for my fellow man be he black, white , gay, straight. This love is the recognition of the potentiality of every human to follow Him.
To a man, they too argued that they didn’t hate anyone, they were just upholding God’s will and divine order. Liberal activists and judges just wanted to stir up things with a societal institution they just didn’t understand, and it would have destructive effects on society. They considered themselves very prayerful, well meaning Christian people as you do. I susect (hope) most of you would agree they were mistaken.
**Believe me, I don’t consider myself in any light. Only He knows who I am. **
Yet when you use their script in argument, I’m supposed to pretend the parallels don’t exist, and if I don’t, then calling me an emotional jerk and simply denying any connection will all make it go away? If I’m bright enough to see it, anyone can. Tens of millions of Catholics in this country and around the world can see it. Are they anti-religious bigots as well?
The Catholic concept of love carries with it an instructive impetus. Why are you so ostensibly afraid of this?
Someone will inevitably point out that “no, our reasons are qualitatively different than the Jim Crow guys because we have good theological grounds for our stance.” And you do. But so did they.
As above.
If these two civil rights struggles really are apples and oranges without relying on blind acceptance of sectarian theology or silliness about “Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve,” I welcome it. There may be a whole new vista I’m not seeing. But from where I stand now, the apple and orange are really just two rotten apples. One has some orange rind glued to the outside of it, but that doesn’t make it an orange. (And pointing that out makes me a horrible immature person, apparently).