MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
It does make sense doesn't it? However I agree that it doesn't truly exist as it should in the US, not right now it doesn't, and it probably never has. It's not in the constitution or anything either, it's just an idea. I completely agree that a healthy government should separate church and state though.
Well, like any ideal (or law), it's a guideline and something to aim for, with the realistic expectation that there will be deviations, and that that's not a problem so long as there is a workable plan in place for how to address, redress, and correct those deviations. It worries me that the vocally irreligious in the US now almost monopolize this necessary watchdog-of-Church-State-violations role. I understand why this is such a salient emotional issue for them. But I also think there needs to be ample representation from the religious (and the spiritual-not-religious) camps on these watchdog committees. More American Christians need to wake up and realize that it's in their religious communities' own best interest to defend SoC&S. Not only that, but it's actually very consistent with the principles Jesus taught -- love thy neighbor, wish well upon those who wish you harm, give unto Ceasar what is owed to Caesar and unto God what is owed to God.
Instead, by SoC&S advocates becoming an increasingly homogeneously godless bunch, it becomes easier for threatened American Christians to just write off the movement as a trojan horse for atheism, instead of fundamental to how their communities came to thrive in America to begin with!