Quote from: willowtreewren on September 12, 2013, 01:51:45 PM QuoteI thought I had made this quite clear. The Oregon bakery incident is quite striking. Exercising Christian values by NOT participating in gay marriage is now chastised. That is a direct infringement of first amendment rights. As in Europe and Canada, the courts have decided along the lines of the Humanist Manifesto's elevating gay rights above religious freedom.All right. I think I now understand your point, although I disagree with it. I think civil law SHOULD supersede religious "law." Ours is a civil government, not a theocracy. The founding fathers were very clear on establishing it as such. So, where religious practices (discrimination of gays in this case) go counter to civil law, those practices fall outside the law. Just as those whose religion bans medical intervention may be held accountable for the deaths of children when medical intervention could prevent those deaths. This gets back to having to decide which religions are "right." You think that yours is right and that gays should be treated as second class citizens. Others might think that their religion is right and that those who discriminate against gays are second class citizens. The practice of religious freedom ends where it crosses the boundary of legality.
QuoteI thought I had made this quite clear. The Oregon bakery incident is quite striking. Exercising Christian values by NOT participating in gay marriage is now chastised. That is a direct infringement of first amendment rights. As in Europe and Canada, the courts have decided along the lines of the Humanist Manifesto's elevating gay rights above religious freedom.All right. I think I now understand your point, although I disagree with it. I think civil law SHOULD supersede religious "law." Ours is a civil government, not a theocracy. The founding fathers were very clear on establishing it as such. So, where religious practices (discrimination of gays in this case) go counter to civil law, those practices fall outside the law. Just as those whose religion bans medical intervention may be held accountable for the deaths of children when medical intervention could prevent those deaths. This gets back to having to decide which religions are "right." You think that yours is right and that gays should be treated as second class citizens. Others might think that their religion is right and that those who discriminate against gays are second class citizens. The practice of religious freedom ends where it crosses the boundary of legality.
I thought I had made this quite clear. The Oregon bakery incident is quite striking. Exercising Christian values by NOT participating in gay marriage is now chastised. That is a direct infringement of first amendment rights. As in Europe and Canada, the courts have decided along the lines of the Humanist Manifesto's elevating gay rights above religious freedom.
Mixed threads? Come on out of the OT Rocker.
Since when do you not get married if you committed fornication prior to marriage?
You continue to display an amazing ignorance of the Bible and Christianity.
They didn't wish to participate in a gay marriage
Mom fights back: Teacher tells daughter she can’t choose God as her idol
In this situation what's "outrageous" is the teacher's lack of understanding
Back to "cafeteria" Christianity. This little cartoon sums up many of the contradictions of the Bible. While Rocker calls this cafeteria Christianity, I call it cherry picking the Bible to find what one wants to believe from it and tossing the rest. So, going back to the bakery, why do the owners serve people who have committed adultery? Isn't THAT cherry picking from sins?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB3g6mXLEKkAleta
Now let's look at the premise that the civil law of the USA is based on the 10 commandments. Here they are:*** 1. Thou shalt have no other gods before me. 2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me; And shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my commandments. 3. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain; for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain. 4. Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates: For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it. 5. Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee. 6. Thou shalt not kill. 7. Thou shalt not commit adultery. 8. Thou shalt not steal. 9. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour. 10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour’s.***I don't think the Constitution says ANYTHING about numbers 1,2,3,4,5,7,9, or 10.So, perhaps we could say that the Constitution reflects 1/5 of the commandments. Not a very good track record for claiming that the laws of our country are based on the 10 commandments. Aleta
Dear Aleta, I suggest you do a better study on the Common Law and Civil Law. Then look at the influences of the Common Law moreso than the Civil Law in our founding documents which by the way starts with the declaration of Independence. Remember, it is 1776 that the US became a nation, not 1789.Not much to respond to Aleta, you need to do some more homework on this issue. Take care,Peter
QuoteDear Aleta, I suggest you do a better study on the Common Law and Civil Law. Then look at the influences of the Common Law moreso than the Civil Law in our founding documents which by the way starts with the declaration of Independence. Remember, it is 1776 that the US became a nation, not 1789.Not much to respond to Aleta, you need to do some more homework on this issue. Take care,PeterSorry, Peter. I am not claiming to be an expert and I don't accept your condescending attitude as a good argument. On the other hand, I have taken several courses on the Bible. There are so many "laws" in the Bible that are completely ignored in any legal system today, that I can't help but wonder why the "word of god" is held up as the basis for our Constitution. And quibbling over the date of the beginning of our country is rather silly. The colonies declared independence in 1776, but did not put our current government in place until later. So what? Back to the question of gay rights, and whether businesses should be allowed to discriminate against gays for religious reasons - as a physician, would your religious conscience have guided you to refuse treatment of gays? Why or why not? Would your religious conscience have guided you to refuse treatment of unwed mothers? Isn't adultery a sin? What about people who are divorced? If you can condone treatment for some of these folks, but not others, I would consider that cherry picking the laws of the Bible. That brings me back to the same confusion that I have trouble getting past. Who gets to decide which things to follow in the Bible and which things to ignore if the whole thing is supposed to be the word of god? And why did this sacred word shift so dramatically from the OT to the NT? Did god change his mind? Make a mistake?
Christians following in the footsteps of Jesus are not here to condemn the world as you imply in your question, but to send the message of how to come to know Jesus and sin no more. So it is NOT at all a contradiction as you are trying to imply to treat gay couples or adulterers or fornicators or any of the multitude of sins we commit but at the same time state you would not participate in any manner with a gay marriage which is against God's laws. In other words, we will not condone what God does not condone. That is at the same time not a condemnation since we are all under the condemnation of sins within our own lives. But to participate in that and in essence give tacit approval to staying within what God has defined as a sin would be in error of the admonition, go and sin no more.
If one believes that God will judge our sins at the end and we are all sinners and doctors will treat all who need treating since all are with sin, should we not simply do our jobs whatever they might be and allow God to do the judging at the end. The serving of customers, the treating of patients, the defending of criminals within a justice system does not mean that one agrees with or condones all of their beliefs or actions. I certainly do't feel up to the task of deciding whose sins warrant my boycott unless those trespasses are specifically against me. ..in which cases I think I'd want help from our imperfect legal system. I paraphrase the Dalai Lama in saying that my religion is simple, my religion is kindness.
Peter, with all due respect, I understand your point and also that it comes from your deeply held conviction of the truth of the Bible and of Jesus's exhortation for us all to GO AND SIN NO MORE. It seems to me however that while this may well be pertinent for each individual to try to live up to, each Christian is not Jesus nor should he try to sit in judgment of the sins of others given that each human has sins enough of his own with which to deal. We all must interact regularly with folks who sin, who have sinned and who will sin again and to refuse to bake cakes, or treat patients or represent clients etc. seems to me quite un Christian. I think we would all do well to proceed through life with acts of kindness as our action goals, regardless of religion or philosophy and then at the end God can judge. I really do understand that you believe in the Bible and all that it says, I respect your conviction, and I also know that others are guided through life by a variety of religious views or organizing principles. I am not up to judging others or even trying to exhort them to behave...I have enough to look at within myself.
Sadly, they didn't consult God about that new modern ethics.
QuoteSadly, they didn't consult God about that new modern ethics. How does one "consult God"?