Talk Back

comments: 114

In a recent entry to RichardLandAnswers.com, Dr. Land, president of the ERLC, lays out 3 competing models for the relationship between church and state.

  • Acknowledgment
  • Avoidance

Excerpt: “…in America in Muskogee, Oklahoma, (in about as deep in red state country as you can get) they have concluded that Muslim girls may or may not wear their head scarves to school depending on the Muslim girls and their parents’ preference. That is pluralism. Where you have the right to express your faith, I have the right to express my faith, in public places and all the government does is make sure everybody plays fair: that the minority does not get to silence the majority and the majority does not get to silence the minority.” – Richard Land

How do you think the relationship between church and state should work?

114 comments (post your own) feed

1 On Nov 22nd, 2007, at 11:48pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

The one True (Christian Triune) God is over the church as well as the state.  The church is responsible to exegete the authorities of each but is not at liberty to define them in our republican-constitutional state government.  There are overlapping areas, such as marriage, and there are non-overlapping areas such as the highest form of negative sanction: excommunication for the church and capital punishment for the state.

Religious liberty is a Christian doctrine.  Hence, the state can be free to uphold that liberty only by remaining strictly Christian.  There is no room for pluralism in the authority of the state.  We are one nation under God.

When the state permits Muslim girls the religious practice of wearing head scarves, this isn’t pluralism.  It is, or should be, an application of the Christian doctrine of religious liberty and freedom.

How does the state make sure everybody plays fair?  By applying God’s Law.

2 On Nov 23rd, 2007, at 7:20am, V. L. Parks wrote:

You can only do it in love, true Christ Love, there is no other way.  If the people do not have love, Christ Love, it will become a law that becomes a ugly giant and causes pain.  Nothing works if it is not done through Christ Love, nothing! If you have a nation that has not Christ Love you get the me, mine attitudes, hearts and laws. I Pray..
Father God I ask for the Love that Christ brought. For me, for my family and for my nation, for my world. Fill us Lord Jesus with Your Love for every person on the face of this earth. In Your name Jesus I ask. amen.

3 On Nov 27th, 2007, at 7:51pm, Lisa Morris wrote:

Bill of Rights - Amendment I
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.’

The words “separation between church and state” aren’t in here.  So let’s begin by looking only at the words that ARE in this amendment.  Simply, Congress can not make any law that establishes a religion.  Neither can Congress make a law that prohibits the free exercise of religion.  That’s how it should work.  This second part is what seems to be forgotten quite a bit.

4 On Dec 2nd, 2007, at 8:41pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

Lisa, it was a poor choice in words on the ERLC home page.  It’s phrased a bit differently here: How do you think the relationship between church and state should work?  Do you have an idea on this one?

5 On Dec 3rd, 2007, at 9:30pm, D Hansen wrote:

TO MR. LAND

Tonight, you said Romney should give a speech in strong support for Religious tolerance and freedoms...I agree. And why doesn’t the Baptist Convention come out with a speech or press release for Religious tolerance of fellow Christians (Mormons) also? Evangelicals such Keller out of Atlanta) keep calling Mormons a cult. That is un-Christ like and offensive to Mormons. 

HUCKABEE’S CHARMING” TAX-AND-SPEND RECORD. Betsy Hagan, Eagle Forum: “He Was Pro-Life And Pro-Gun, But Otherwise A Liberal” ‘Just like Bill Clinton he will charm you, but takes a completely different turn in office.’” (WSJ). Huckabee is “A Treacherous Liberal On Taxes, Social Welfare Spending And Illegal Immigration.” (Washington Times). Phyllis Schlafly: “Huckabee “Destroyed The Conservative Movement In Arkansas…leaving the GOP ‘in shambles.”

Thank you,
D Hansen
Christian friend of Baptists

6 On Dec 5th, 2007, at 3:58pm, Loyd Turner wrote:

The 1st amendment reads, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof--”. The statement about a wall of separation between church & state was made in a letter on Jan.1, 1802, by Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury Baptist Association of Connecticut. They had heard a rumor that the Congregationalists was to become the national religion. He, wrote to the Danbury Congregation that the separation was to be that government would not establish a national religion or dictate to men how to worship God.  He also wrote: I contemplate with solemn reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should “make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof-” thus building a wall of separation between Church & State. The reason was because he was addressing a Baptist congregation. He wanted to remove all fears that the state would dictate to the church.

7 On Dec 18th, 2007, at 11:01am, Louis Husser, Senior Pastor wrote:

Dear Dr. Land,

I consider myself one of your proteges.  In your newsletter dated December 7, 2007, in reference to Mitt Romney’s speech the quote that concerns me is as follows:  “let me assure you that authorities of my church, or any other church, for that matter, will never exert influence on presidential decisions.  Their authority is theirs, within the province of church affairs, and it ends where the affairs of the nation begins.”

Throughout the Old Testament prophets gave strong influence and advice to Kings.  John the Baptist did not step over his boundaries when he rebuked Herod.  Is Mitt Romney saying that pastors have no place influencing policy?  When I became a pastor I did not lay down my citizenship.  As a member of a church I did not relinquish my authority to speak concerning public policy.  He is injecting a false philosophy into the separation of church and state.  Correct me if I am wrong.

His for Souls,

Louis Husser, Senior Pastor
Crossgate Church

8 On Dec 19th, 2007, at 3:02pm, Greg wrote:

Mr. Husser,

I can see where you are coming from. Naturally our religion affects our beliefs, values, and ideologies. Obviously such an influence will affect our opinion on issues. I think the point Romney is trying to make is similar to what John Edwards said about gay marriage: his religion forbids it, but he cannot deny that right to other Americans, just because he thinks it is wrong. Which brings up the important point of the overlap of marriage between church and state. Marriage is a sacrament. True. But even Christians are divided over the issue of whether same sex marriages should be allowed in their churches. Marriage is ALSO a civil right, their are over 1,200 federal laws that accord special privileges to married couples. The Supreme Court in Turner v. Safely (1987) determined marriage was an important constitutional right. In 2004 in Lawrence v. Texas it protected the rights of homosexuals under the equality clause of the 14th Amendment.

9 On Dec 19th, 2007, at 3:14pm, Greg wrote:

The separation is that marriage should be allowed to all Americans because they are guaranteed the civil right and churches should be allowed the religious freedom to refuse to perform such a marriage if it is not in accordance with their beliefs because it is a religious sacrament. The point is that you need to be careful not to try and enforce you religious beliefs on others that don’t share those beliefs, especially when it denies them equal rights. That is the separation. It is not meant to handicap the majority faith, it is meant to protect the minority faith.

10 On Dec 29th, 2007, at 7:13am, Trent Johnson wrote:

Blessed is the nation whos God is the Lord. It is just another lie from the devil. You are always talking about the salt of the earth and the light of the world. Salt heals, preserves and flavors and where there is no light there is gross darkness, but put salt on an open wound and it stings to no end. Those without Lord are wounded and in gross darkness. That is why they hate the salt. It is the sting they cannot stand, and the light exposes their sin and they do not want that exposed. They think that if the light and the salt are removed they will be free to do as they please, but they will find that there isn’t any more flavor, or healing or preservation to life, only gross darkness where there will be wailing and nashing of teeth. It will be to late at this point. It will be the dividing of the sheep and the goats and they will not want what they have brought upon themselves. May the God of all creation have mercy on us all!!!

11 On Dec 31st, 2007, at 6:37pm, Steve Mitchell wrote:

Greg, your post tends to go along the lines of the old axiom that you can’t legislate morality. The problem with this is that ALL laws legislate morality. The only question is whose morality will be legislated. As Christians, we should be active in the political arena to ensure that biblical views on morality receive an adequate hearing. That is quite different from forcing someone to practice a specific religion, which was the intent of the protections afforded in the Bill of Rights.

Another recent issue involves whether voters should consider a candidate’s religious beliefs as they decide who to support. Some have said that this amounts to a religious qualifications test, which is unconstitutional. Obviously, this is not the case. Individual voters must look at all of the beliefs and values of the candidates to ensure that they cast their ballots for those who most closely reflect their positions on key issues. This is simply exercising good judgment, not being discriminatory.

12 On Jan 4th, 2008, at 6:16pm, Greg wrote:

Discrimination:
treatment or consideration of, or making a distinction in favor of or against, a person or thing based on the group, class, or category to which that person or thing belongs rather than on individual merit

Non-heteosexual couples aren’t allowed to marry denying them 1,138 federal laws that give special status to married couples . . . . need I say more?

I think its ironic that some who claim to be the moral right are the same people who seek to deny groups of people equal treatment under the law. Using your religious beliefs and enacting them into law forces others who don’t share those beliefs to follow the same law. So in that way the beliefs of an organized block of people can create laws that enforce their beliefs onto an oppressed minority. Your beliefs are your own, its not your place to legislate them when it hurts others.

13 On Jan 8th, 2008, at 9:27pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

Steve and Greg you are both correct about discrimination but they are different applications.  Every time I step into the voting booth I discriminate candidates selecting the one I want.  With a different application, Greg, you have touched on (group) discrimination which Baptists do not have the logic to defend.  The Constitution only allows discrimination to one group - the (civil) law breaker.  When the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Texas sodomy law this is what put teeth in Greg’s logic pertaining to homosexual marriage.  Baptists want a pluralistic civil government but it just ain’t possible; as Steve rightly says someone’s (religious) morality is enforced.  Because government makes moral decisions it is inherently religious.  Richard Land likes Article VI paragraph 3.  Hmmm, what religion is our US Constitution?

14 On Jan 9th, 2008, at 5:54pm, Greg wrote:

This nation and the Constitution was founded actually by deists, who actually believe that divine revelation and holy books are human interpretations rather than authoritative sources.

Let’s reflect on our government for a second. Does the fact that the constitution, like our Congress, was written by white, wealthy, heterosexual men mean that the concerns of our Constitution and our laws in biased? Is there reason why our country has such an infamous past of prejudice, persecution, and oppression?

Racism and other issues that have become scars on our national identity aren’t things of the past. There is an extent to which religion dictates our morality but there is also a part of our morality not determined by our religion. I believe there is an American morality. A sense that everyone deserves equality of opportunity and personal liberties and freedom. We have lost sight of that American sense of what is moral.

15 On Jan 11th, 2008, at 11:12pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Morality, ethics, or moral philosophy, whatever you call it, is one’s opinion on what is good and evil.  American morality also used to include the sense that homosexuality was a civil crime since the Bible clearly teaches it to be a sinful lifestyle detrimental to society.  This is what the Baptists cannot defend logically since they have already acknowledged the Bible has no civil authority in our nation.  I only agreed that the U.S. Constitution (USC) is on the side of the Baptists.  In my opinion a USC amendment is needed to replace article VI paragraph 3 with an oath to the Authority of the Old and New Testaments.  Then and only then can law begin to get righted, via democratic process, to have civil government under the authority of Jesus Christ. I want 100% of my morality to be shaped by Him as well. Col 2:8-10

16 On Jan 12th, 2008, at 3:02pm, Trent Johnson wrote:

If (Heb.13:8) Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, and today and forever, and if (Isa.9:6-7)is true, 9:6 For unto us a child is born, and the government shall be upon his shoulder:  (Isa.9:7) Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, to order it, and to establish it with judgement and justice from henceforth and even forever, and if (Phi.2:9-11) are true, (Phi.2:9) Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given Him a name which is above every name:(Phi.2:10) That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, (Phi.2:11) And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, then there is no separation of church and state. In fact, just the opposite is true. There will be no discrimination, because every and all sin will be judged, finished and settled once and for all. So, if one is fighting for separation of church and state, then one is fighting against God Himself. Good luck, you are going to need it.

17 On Jan 14th, 2008, at 4:54pm, Greg wrote:

Trent it sounds like you would be happier in a country like Iran. The US is built on the separation of church and state so I guess, according to you, we will all need a lot of luck. Your message sounds like that of the Islamic extremists we are trying to fight, only with a Christian instead of a Islamic twist.

18 On Jan 14th, 2008, at 7:41pm, Dreama Taylor wrote:

The separation of church and state issue has been detached from it’s historical origination. Our forefathers wished to protect our young nation from the same fate as England declared itself Anglican.
United States history is afterall our story; past generations handed off to following generations the responsibility, execution and protection of the awesome, miraculous constitution that God was credited and honored for by all who took part in the penning of our Constitution. Those wise men followed the very Word of God (OT) as a model to shape our government. Seems we are not so different from the Israelites; no matter how often God reveals Himself in miraculous ways we soon lean toward forgetfulness and stray.
We Christians must not relinquish our duty to protect and guard the liberties that God Himself afforded us. Erroneous “Separation of church and state” mentality does not free us of this responsibility.

19 On Jan 15th, 2008, at 2:25pm, Greg wrote:

The American colonies, particularly the Bay Colony in Massachusetts, were designed to follow the intent of the bible. Their laws were based on the bible (or their interpretation of it) and the world view of Sir Robert Filmer. The result was a colony were women had no power, were raped without punishment, or were punished if it was discovered they allowed themselves to get raped. They killed homosexuals, persecuted against Jews, Baptists, and Catholics. Filmerian thought was completely based on social inequality and hierarchy. There was no privacy and a crime for everything.

Our founding fathers were deists and created the separation of church and state so that the USA would be a land of freedom, liberty, and equality, not to be dominated by a single religious denomination. To say that the separation of church and state is erroneous sounds incredibly unpatriotic, since it is that separation that makes this country what it is and separates us from Iran.

20 On Jan 15th, 2008, at 2:30pm, Greg wrote:

For those not familiar with Filmer. His ideas, which were adopted in England and in England’s settling of America, were based on the fifth commandment, “honor thy father and thy mother.” That was used to justify a hierarchy in all aspects of life. Social inequality was believed to be the way God wanted it. But today equality of opportunity is a core American value. In a Filmerian society, equality didn’t exist unless you were white, rich, a member of the dominant denomination in your community, first born, and male. Everyone else was relegated to a lower position, not because of their personal merit but because of how they were born.

Is that the America you want?

21 On Jan 15th, 2008, at 9:01pm, Trent Johnson wrote:

Whoever, Sounds like you don’t know or read or believe your bible. Those aren’t my words, they are Gods words. Like it says, It will be established with JUDGMENT and JUSTICE forever! Every knee shall bow and that includes you. So get ready to face the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. I am reminded of John the Baptist’s words, Oh brood of vipers who hath warned you to flee the wrath to come. Take heed, Everything that can be shaken will be, and if your house is built on the sand instead of the rock, Jesus Christ, you are going to need more than luck!

22 On Jan 16th, 2008, at 10:22pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Trent, you are forgetting that there is a difference between civil sin, and sin.  Sure David said against you and you only [God] have I sinned [adultery and murder] and done what is evil in your sight.  This is because God does have authority over civil government as you pointed out.  David, however, didn’t receive the death penalty because he was King.  Jesus said to look upon a woman to lust after her in your heart is just as bad as committing the act.  This is in God’s sight.  Does man have a right to apply civil punishment for someone who only thinks rape or adultery?  So, there are at least two categories: sin in general and a subset: civil sin.  This is where many Christians stumble.

23 On Jan 17th, 2008, at 8:50am, Dreama wrote:

Thankyou, Trent.
Does this not reiterate,a2talljew56, the need for protection against the distorted views of God’s Word/the government? No matter how much God’s Word offends or restricts the thought/actions of those who resent responsibility of adhering to God’s law, His Word WILL stand...we can’t alter it, change it or escape the consequences of denying it. Oh but there are many benefits to heeding God’s Word &modeling;government accordingly.
I ask,what concept reverberates in the Ten Commandments?  RESPECT.  Positive changes/benefits are birthed via respect(classrooms,homes,churches,government...) Proper context,view and execution of the relationship of church and state is vital to our societal health. One without the other leads to the nightmare mentioned by you my friend, .
God’s word will stand no matter what. Face it now or face it later, but face it we will.

24 On Jan 18th, 2008, at 6:08am, Trent Johnson wrote:

Harry & Drema, Thanks for your post. I am a sinful man and the only hope I have is that He who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it until Jesus Christ. I look foward to that day. I believe that we are at the culmination of all the ages. With that said, I guess I get tired of anything goes except the truth of God’s word and I am looking past the so called church/state issue, or any other, to a time when the whole earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord and there will be no other issue. My mind & heart is there now. FOREVER oh Lord Thy word is settled in heaven! Face the firey furnace or anything else, I will turn away from the only real truth and wisdom I’ve ever found and the more we as a people turn away and push God out the slippery the slopes become and the easier it is for those without the Lord to slide right into the eternal pits of hell. Thank God there is a redemer and may He reign in our hearts and our government, now and forever!!!!

25 On Jan 18th, 2008, at 6:27am, Dreama wrote:

Just a moment to address the aforementioned lack of patriotism, perhaps to some patriotism is like beauty, “in the eye of the beholder”. I happen to be fortunate enough to be a member of a family actively engaged in the pursuit of freedom from the beginning. My family was among one of the first to settle Virginia and possibly linked to the “Lost Colony” of North Carolina. We are a family activist, military leaders, preachers....we know the cost of taking a stand for right & wrong, truth, freedom....trust me when I say, patriotism is one treasure I am not without. I think we all need to pray for a fresh insight & clear mindedness re: the matters involving church & state relationship, right & wrong, truth & blurred lines… (a serious review of the Ten Commmandments I’m certain would help us all).

26 On Jan 18th, 2008, at 7:24am, Trent Johnson wrote:

The framers of the consitution were not deists. Nothing could be futher from the truth and anyone who thinks so would have to be blind or out right lying. Thomas Jefferson even produced The Jefferson Bible. King David didn’t die for his sin because he was the King, God put away his sin because it was a revelation of Jesus Christ and the redeeming work He was yet to do (a picture of Christ & the cross) and David was a man after God’s own heart as well as he carried the blood line through which Christ would come and His throne will be established forever. If so called separation is ever realized, we will cease to exsit as a nation.

27 On Jan 18th, 2008, at 11:10pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

After checking Scripture, Trent, you are right.  Nathan said David would not die for his sin.  I was merely referring to the impracticality of David’s execution.  He would have had to give the command to execute himself and judge that it indeed was a just sentence.  Getting back to topic, Dreama says we need to seriously review the Ten Commandments to know God’s mind in the matter of church and state relationship.  For Baptists who are not convinced Scripture teaches a specifically Christian civil government I recommend Greg Bahnsen’s _By This Standard_ or for those who want to dive into the deep end his _Theonomy in Christian Ethics_.  R J Rushdooney’s _Biblical Institutes_ is a good starting point to begin to know how Scripture is supposed to be applied to civil law.  Revolution is not in my thinking.  We need to then follow the prescribed Constitutional methods to slowly change law to conform to God’s standard for civil justice.

28 On Jan 19th, 2008, at 12:58pm, Greg wrote:

Here are some historical facts regardless.

Thomas Paine published “The Age of Reason” which popularized deism in America.

Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Cornelius Harnett, Gouverneur Morris, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Ethan Allen all either considered themselves deists or expressed strong components of deist beliefs in their personal diaries, speeches, and other writings.

We founded this nation for many reasons. One was that so the colonists like Dreama’s family could practice their religion in peace. The separation of church and state is not meant to hurt religion or religious practice. It was added to protect religion and ensure that no single denomination would dominate the others, as had happened in England.

The separation of church and state has protected the freedom of religious expression of Baptists and will continue to do so in the future.

29 On Jan 19th, 2008, at 3:21pm, Trent Johnson wrote:

Are we done? I’m glad we’ve got that settled. Thanks For Faith and Family!!!!

30 On Jan 22nd, 2008, at 7:39am, Dreama wrote:

Thank you gentlemen. It’s been an honor.

31 On Jan 22nd, 2008, at 9:36pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

I admit that I am not well read, especially when it comes to history.  Recently I did enjoy reading a book by R.J. Rushdoony _The Nature of the American System_.  This author is known to have read an average of a book a day for most of his adult life.  If we agree that an orthodox Christian is one who takes Scripture at its Word then here is what he says on page 140-141.

“In [Psalm 2] vv.10-12, the nations are exhorted to abandon the conspiracy against God and His Christ or else face destruction. ... To this view of history, Jesus Christ gave His authority, declaring of the men of His day, as they conspired against Him, that their conpiratorial thesis was the seizure of the Kingdom and inheritance by the murder of the heir (Matt. 21:38).  While the liberals may view belief in the conspiracy view of history as absurd, or even as a sign of membership in the “lunatic fringe,” the orthodox Christian must assert it to be basic to the philosophy of history.

32 On Jan 25th, 2008, at 9:10am, Trent Johnson wrote:

For anyone who thinks our founding Fathers were deists, I would like to suggest that you go to wallbuilders.com and read house resolution 888. God Bless the USA!!!!!!!!

33 On Jan 25th, 2008, at 5:54pm, Greg wrote:

And for everyone else I would suggest reading any scholarly article. The web site just referred to has a political stance and is not a purely objective, academic site. Not every aspect of history is subject to partisan interpretation. Also, the resolution referred to above suggests that these men where influenced by the bible, believed in God, and thought religion was central in their lives, all of which are true even though they also had deist ideas, beliefs, or conversions.

34 On Jan 26th, 2008, at 10:20am, Dreama wrote:

I cannot even find an appropriate word to accurately describe the feelings evoked by looking around me and witnessing the ever growing result of the new ‘separation of church & state’ mentality. Does no one else see what that so called sophisticated thinking has done and continues to ‘feed’ to society? For instance, taking prayer out of school has raised a generation of searching, lost, misguided, confused, vulnerable young souls. Let’s face it. A far too staggering number of people are buying into, exploiting and enjoying the lack of accountability fed by lack of exposure scripture, prayer, sound, lawful guidance. I grew up in a generation of church-goers.  That generational influence seems to have passed & been replaced by a staggering number of non-church-goers. So, confused, searching, misguided....wonder why?

35 On Jan 28th, 2008, at 10:46am, Trent Johnson wrote:

Greg, I guess none of the founding Fathers were scholarly in your view and anything other than saperation to you is considered partisan, and the results of such thinking lead to the exact consequences stated by Dreama above and worse. Like the Bible says, man will wax worse & worse, and when the saperation crowd acheive their goal, and think they are now free to defile themselves to very depths of their imagination, watch and see if the very machine they have created doesn’t turn and consume them, because that is the result of no restraints. 2Ti.3:7 Ever learning, and never able to come to knowledge of the truth. Rom 1:22 Professing themselves to be wise they became fools…

36 On Jan 28th, 2008, at 1:17pm, Greg wrote:

As previously established the separation is meant to protect religion. I support the truth that there is a separation, however, I don’t agree with removing religion from schools, or any part of life for that matter. I believe that prayer should be allowed, but if we do that we must realize that we are allowing prayer for Jews, all denominations of Christians, Muslims, Hindus, etc., and must also respect the choice of atheists not to pray. Taking prayer out of schools was reading too much into the separation and not enough into freedom of religion. To reiterate my previous point, the reason there is a separation of church and state is to make sure no single religious denomination dominates the rest through the power of government. Furthermore, I would also argue that other generations have been just as “confused, searching, misguided” as this one. No time in American history have we had all the answers and I don’t think we ever will. That is personally why I believe in God.

37 On Jan 28th, 2008, at 2:00pm, Bob H. wrote:

With regard to foreign policy of the federal government, I believe that each Christian citizen has responsibility to influence their elected leaders,to elect those leaders who will best reflect their convictions or to run for office themselves.  Should the Archbishop of the Catholic Church advocate Federal Government support for revolutionary theology movements in South America?  Should the head of a Baptist group speak directly to the President on behalf of thousands of independent churches regarding an act of war in the middle east?  I think not.

38 On Jan 28th, 2008, at 4:13pm, Greg wrote:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”
-first amendment to the U.S. Constitution

“building a wall of separation between church and state”
-Thomas Jefferson in a letter to the Danbury Baptist Association

“Strongly guarded . . . is the separation between religion and government in the Constitution of the United States,” . . . “practical distinction between Religion and Civil Government is essential to the purity of both, and as guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States.”
-James Madison

-In more than 25 separate Supreme Court cases the high court has used the term “separation of church and state” and has upheld its constitutionality

The separation of church and state is a legal and political reality, not some fantasy of liberals and atheists.

39 On Jan 28th, 2008, at 8:42pm, Dreama wrote:

I carry in my mind a statement uttered by a former student I taught in an ‘at-risk’ class;"Mrs. Taylor, do you believe in Jesus?” I answered his question unapologetically, “Yes, I do!”
His statement reverberates in my memory;"No one ever talks about that,but I can sure hear about drugs, gangs or worse here at school.” Even in our small community students are influenced by growing#s of teachers of lesser morals/values/ethics. The media unabashedly produces every conceivable evil one could not even imagine under normal circumstances not so long ago. For these reasons & many more I must respectfully disagree that every generation is as misguided, searching ,etc. If not influenced by Christian values from figures & institutions of authority, then other influences will prevail. Evil influence is certainly more rampant than ever before.

40 On Jan 29th, 2008, at 8:55am, Greg wrote:

I can give you a list of atrocities committed by past generations. If you could give me some evidence of how this generation is so much more misguided, because your statements come across as dramatic and unsubstantiated.

Furthermore, you make one big assumption, one must be Christian to be moral. I can also tell you of many great, tremendously moral people in history that were not Christians. Gandhi, Mandela, and Kofi Annan to name a few.

41 On Jan 30th, 2008, at 12:03pm, Dreama wrote:

I am aware of more atrocities than I care to, thank you.
I feel confident I don’t need to supply you with evidence as I am certain you are aware of daily news/media is very informative/graphic. My senses are bombarded by images/info that I would never have even imagined in youth as I’m sure are yours. Thus negative exposure supports the negative influences rampant in our school systems. Dramatic? My friend the schools are full of drama....unsubstantiated?Turn on the news.
I don’t believe I stated one must be Christian to be moral, however, would you not agree the Bible is certainly the authority on morals...Ten Commandments?
How much greater could Gandhi,Mandela & KofiAnnan have been if submitted to the power of God? Why not offer that possibility to our young here in America? Furthermore, my tax dollars didn’t pay them.
Those 3 didn’t face our church/state issue.

42 On Jan 30th, 2008, at 6:55pm, Greg wrote:

Well I am not sure you can blame the failure of our schools on the separation of church and state. Thats a result of underpaid teachers, unqualified bureaucratic administrators, and other socioeconomic factors. There are many private religious schools that are also underachieving.

Furthermore, this generation isn’t responsible for the holocaust, for a world war, for the colonization of the World, for slavery, for the overt oppression of women, blacks, Jews, and immigrants. I don’t see legal segregation, and I don’t see hundreds of African American men hanging from trees.

Sure there are problems going on now, but open a history book, these problems have been going on for the course of human history. Let’s be realistic and not unsubstantiated sensationalists.

43 On Jan 30th, 2008, at 7:07pm, Greg wrote:

I personally believe in God and yes religion and the ten commandments have served as great moral guides in my life. In my eyes that is true. But thats me, and I think its naive to think that other people haven’t found other sources to guide their moral development. You might be interested in an article called “The Moral Instinct” by Steven Pinker. I personally think its very arrogant and egocentric to say that my belief is the only true belief and only people of my religion can be moral people. The fact is there are tremendously moral people that are non-Chrisitan and tremendously immoral people that are Christians. There’s no direct correlation.

44 On Jan 30th, 2008, at 9:31pm, Roberta Franklin wrote:

I would gently remind us all that there is a great difference between “church” as most people interpret the word (meaning religion) and “church” as in the Body of Christ.  This is, undoubtedly God’s world and it is He who allows the authority of the “state,” wherever that may be.  Thus real separation between the Body of Christ and the government under which they live is impossible.  We, by God’s grace and plan, live in America, with relative freedom (given by God alone) to practice whichever “religion” we choose.  Others in this world are placed by God in different situations, but always with His goodness and sovereignty in tact.  The world’s problem, as well as the individuals problem, is that we choose to forget that there is only one Creator God, and He is not us...you, or I.  One born again child of the living God need only participate where He directs to impact the relationship between the “church” and “state” in the way God wants it done.

45 On Jan 31st, 2008, at 9:02pm, Michael L. Cornett wrote:

God has given me authority over my family. That means who my son dates and who my daughter dates. The state has no business involving themselves in my family and what we believe and who we worship. God has supreme authority over my family not me. If God calls me to lay down my life for my family or my neighbor you better believe that my life means nothing to me.  I love God, America and my Family all in that order.Isaiah says that mans heart is desperately wicked who can know it? Proverbs says there is a way to man that seems right in his own eyes but the end is oonly death. I am just trying to be a father to my son and daughter and a husband to my wife. That means I can not do what is right in my own eyes but what is right in the eyes of God because He is what matters to me. If the American people do not feel that way I feel sorry for them and their families. Whatever it takes I will seperate Church and State even if it is not very popular and my wife and my God say the same.

46 On Feb 1st, 2008, at 6:30am, Dreama wrote:

Well said, Roberta.
This is a classic example, Greg, of just how easily we become distracted. We complicate things often by overthinking on our own, which reiterates the importance of turning to God for guidance.
Please don’t put words in my mouth. I am not attacking the school systems; “my way” is not the only way, but like it or not there is One True God...no one can escape that. I’m interested in equipping young people with the one core avenue of problem solving, strength, help, guidance, power...prayer is missing in all too many lives. (To me it is no differant than providing a starving person with food; thank God power of prayer is in never-ending supply.)Intelligence & education driven by the power of prayer can be an unstoppable force.
As for me, I’ll continue to follow God’s guidance.

47 On Feb 1st, 2008, at 1:25pm, Greg wrote:

Well, I think we have finally found a point of agreement. God is a supreme source of guidance and religion a source of morality for the vast majority of Americans, including myself. I am not trying to say that you should separate religion from your own lives. Religion is vital to most of us. My point is that you cannot impose your individual belief system on the rest of the country. If there was no legal separation of church and state who’s religion would run the nation? The Southern Baptists, who are a small minority? Catholics? Jews? Episcopalians? Who?

48 On Feb 1st, 2008, at 3:11pm, eugene wrote:

there is NO separation of church and state, just no forced religion by the state!!!

49 On Feb 2nd, 2008, at 8:45pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

I feel I must come to Greg’s legal side.  For example, personally, I detest the fact that the state has condoned homosexuality, but, legally, even our Christian Constitutional lawyers have to agree.  They believe the first amendment covers *all* religions.  Our founding fathers did consider using the word “denomination” but didn’t. It follows that atheists have the right to define civil morality any way they choose.  So, why not consensual adult homosexuality?  Why is a marriage *amendment* being considered to stop homosexual marriage?  An amendment is to change the original!  If homosexual marriage is forbidden by the US Constitution now, then how come the key judge or judges are not impeached?  Both facts have the same conclusion.  The U.S. Constitution permits marriage to be defined other than what Scripture says.

50 On Feb 2nd, 2008, at 8:58pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

Family authority is subject to the state.  Just a couple examples.  There are zillons more.  Baptists lost a U.S. Supreme Court decision where a teenager wanted to be baptised but her parents forbade it.  The state ruled her parents had the authority to overrule the teenager’s and Baptist Church’s authority.  Joseph Smith lost his polygamy case.  “Church” has another meaning: a particular denomination or ecclesiastical authority.  I believe in this separation of church and state.  The other two definitions, given by Roberta, are impossible to separate from “state”.  The argument over whether deists founded our government or not is not the issue.  It’s a legal question.  What religion or philosophical authority is our U.S. Constitution under?

51 On Feb 4th, 2008, at 9:44am, Dreama wrote:

No religion is over our U.S. Constition. God is the authority all humanity (each human) falls under; therefore our country ultimatly falls under God’s authority. So, where’s the scripture that back’s up the argument (whatever the argument)? We have complicated what God made simple...if it doesn’t agree with God’s Word, it’s wrong. “Oh what tangled webs we weave.”
I tire of appealing to human intellect when God made it all so simple really. Once again, the Ten Commandments...the gauge by which all humanity is judged. Wonder why God said, “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife” & not thy neighbor’s ‘partner’?

52 On Feb 4th, 2008, at 4:59pm, Greg wrote:

The point is that separation of church and state protects marriage and is not meant to hurt it. I agree sometimes politicians take the separation too far when they expect everyone to abandon their believes in public places. I believe prayer in school is ok, for example, but with the understanding that if you an any way support one religion, you have to support them all, even those who believe God doesn’t exist.

The separation, as I previously stated is a legal reality and not some conspiracy from gay atheist liberals. It helps the Southern Baptists and has allowed them to gain a strong following in several states. It ensured that a more liberal interpretation of scripture didn’t run our nations laws and force the SBC under its religious/secular rule. The SBC follows the same secular laws as everyone else, but thanks to the separation of church and state is can follow whatever religious rules it desires. That is the freedom the separation of church and state gives you.

53 On Feb 4th, 2008, at 10:44pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Dreama, you appear to try to answer my question by saying “no religion is over our U.S. Constitution” but then negate what you just said by saying: God’s authority, God’s Word, and the Ten Commandments are all over (higher in authority than) our U.S. Constitution.  I guess I don’t follow your line of thought?

54 On Feb 5th, 2008, at 10:16am, Dreama wrote:

God is not a religion or philosophy, He is the supreme authority. A person does not negate His authority simply by choosing not to believe in Him or His Word. Since our country was founded based on God’s authority & laws, then decisions which govern us in this country should be weighed against what His Word says about the subject at hand in correlation to the Constitution.

55 On Feb 5th, 2008, at 2:33pm, Greg wrote:

Excuse me, I meant to say:

It is meant to protect religion, not marriage

56 On Feb 6th, 2008, at 6:25pm, Greg wrote:

Well Dreama, I’ll just go with you on that one for a second. The problem still exists who’s interpretation of his word, law’s and authority are you going to use. Jews, Christians, and Muslims all believe in the same God and all three religions have a multitude of denominations. Again, do you use the interpretation of the Episcopalians who generally embrace issues like gay rights or the interpretation of the Southern Baptists who condemn homosexuality. That’s just one of many issues in which different denominations do not agree. You assume there is unity on what God wants us to do and not to do but no such unity exists.

57 On Feb 6th, 2008, at 9:27pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Dreama, You claim God is the Supreme authority over our government but have you studied law?  We have a republican constitutional form of government.  This government is founded on written contracts, and in our case they are called constitutions.  The Federal USC says it is the supreme law of the land.  It requires Federal officials to swear (presumably to some higher authority) allegiance to uphold the constitution.  Lawyers do not accept implicit authorities.  As I mentioned Baptists and most Christian constitutional lawyers say the Christian God has no legal authority over the USC and thus our government.  I believe in what you said, God is the supreme authority, but the key word is -legally- God and the 10 Commandments hold no civil authority.

58 On Feb 7th, 2008, at 9:41am, Dreama wrote:

Last time I checked, God’s law - The Ten Commandments, was not disputed by Christians or Jews,
(nor was our country founded on Muslim belief). What’s so difficult about “Thou shalt not bear false witness”, or “Thou shalt not steal”? I’m reminded here of the saying, “What part of NO don’t you understand?”
Not only do Americans carry the responsibility to do what’s right in God’s eyes, but we also carry the responsibility to protect, carry out, & ensure the goals our founders intended. I suppose an indepth search of that history is vital.
Following is the issue at hand:

Amendment I
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

59 On Feb 7th, 2008, at 4:47pm, Roberta Franklin wrote:

Efforts to legislate any higher moral value are doomed to failure. All formal law is based on some historical value. Problems inherent in arguments acknowledging no absolute moral truth are obvious. There is literally no way to “interpret” the heart/mind of the men who wrote our Constitution-it’s rather moot anyway considering that those who have “ears to hear” will hear, and if they don’t, they won’t. As we are given the freedom to investigate the belief system of those whom we elect, we should exercise as Christians, that freedom, as well as being personally responsible to pray and vote. Mormons are not “Christian,” America is not a “Christian” nation but a nation founded on Judeo-Christian ethics and principles.  It is the sin of mankind that we attempt to make the Creator of all that is into our image and then use Him to justify our actions while at the same time we deny His existence.  Very sad, very lost,very sinfully human.

60 On Feb 7th, 2008, at 6:28pm, Greg wrote:

Well the fifth commandment isn’t so straight forward. As previously mentioned it has been interpreted by some, dating back to Sir Filmer and beyond, to state that women are meant, by God, to be interior and submissive to men. Sure don’t steal, don’t murder, etc. those are common human moral values. Even atheists have such values. However, there are plenty of issues regarding religious law that is debated among religions and denominations. The Episcopalian Church has openly gay leaders, something the Southern Baptists would never condone in their own congregations. There is plenty of divide. So again I ask, if there is no separation of church and state, then who’s interpretation rules the rest? No denomination holds a majority. If the Southern Baptists tried to make the law reflect their beliefs 60-70% or more of the nation would vote against them because they have different beliefs and different interpretations.

61 On Feb 7th, 2008, at 7:22pm, Greg wrote:

And I have done my history. In previous posts I have provided information relating to U.S. Supreme Court cases regarding their usage and upholding of the term “separation of church and state” as well as quotes and statements from the founding fathers that show they also intended a separation of church and state. Furthermore, I have quotes to show that many also were deists. No one as yet responded to my information with any factual information of their own to refute what I have said.

62 On Feb 7th, 2008, at 7:40pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

John LeLand, one of the “founding fathers” of Baptist religious liberty, wrote in his memoirs that Christian, Turk, or pagan would have a right to participate in the new Federal government.

John Whitehead of the Christian Constitutional organization, Rutherford Institute, said the first amendment has recently been reinterpreted to mean any religious belief has equal standing in the public square including atheism, and rightly so.

People who have no regard for the 10 Commandments have been changing U.S. law for quite some time -legally.

As far as bear false witness, have you heard or read any recent political speech or press lately?  As far as thou shalt not steal, how much is a dollar bill actually worth these days?  The government breaks God’s command about equal weights and measures every time they print more fiat money.

63 On Feb 8th, 2008, at 8:31am, Mike West wrote:

The Church is to handle the “great” matters and the State is to handle the “small” matters, clearly both are under the authority of the Lord. See Ex 18:22

Today we see our Church leaders like Dr Land neglecting the great matters like rightly dividing the scriptures and instead being lured into solving smaller issues which offer more immediate personal glory. Spending time with media outlets giving political analysis is much less important than teaching God’s Word on how to vote.
http://www.visionforumministries.org/issues/ballot_box/biblical_standards_for_choosin.aspx

Jesus declared Mark 12:38, to “Beware of the scribes…who love salutations in the marketplace.” As in those days, the well studied scribe’s brilliant interpretations of the meaning of the Law became more important than the Law itself.

King Richard needs to repent or be replaced so he can pursue a professional career in political consulting. To God, his position is much more important than our US Pres.

64 On Feb 8th, 2008, at 1:17pm, Greg wrote:

Everyone is, or at least I hope, smart enough to know how to vote on their own without some religious leader with a political agenda telling you who to vote for.

Politics is dirty, religion is holy. My faith is a different sphere of my life entirely. I think its ridiculous and somewhat blasphemous to say “God wants this candidate.” None of us know, not even our church leaders. Do you honestly think the almighty God, ruler of the Universe, cares who we elect. What God wants is his people to live just lives. Who you do that is open to many interpretations and a lot of which you should use your own judgement. When my religious leaders try mixing politics into religion I find it an insult to my faith in God.

65 On Feb 12th, 2008, at 9:15pm, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

Greg, you’re getting into dualism.  A split of reality into two halves, religion vs politics, secular vs spiritual, faith vs fact, and so on.  Nancy Pearsey in _Total Truth_ does a good job exposing the fallacy of this two-story view of “truth”.

As far as facts and history supporting a Christian government I have heard one of the best resources to be _The Christian Life and Character of the Civil Institutions of the United States_ by Benjamin F. Morris.  However, on the other side, i.e., the U.S. government being secular, beside those facts you already mentioned there is Baptist history and Gary North’s _Political Polytheism_.  Needless to say, this is a huge topic probably outside of this venue of discussion.

66 On Feb 12th, 2008, at 9:23pm, Paul Brodersen wrote:

I don’t understand the theory of the premise. The church is the people; the people of Christ are the church. In much the same way, per Plato, the State is the people, the people of Christ who have freedom due to Judeo-Christian historical events are the State. Perhaps I could wonder on the same train of thought, how should the relationship between me, myself, and I work?

Realistically, the fallacy of separation came from a letter, not constitutional merit. I do not understand the argument for or against separation.

If the church was not separated, legally, perhaps tax liability would result, but so would the creation of a religious political super power. The only restrain for politically active churches currently is fear of loosing tax-exempt status. If such status were taken away, I believe a political machine would result, and I would like to hear comments on whether that would be positive or negative in reclaiming our heritage..

67 On Feb 13th, 2008, at 1:09pm, Greg wrote:

The constitution isn’t a literal document. Anyone familiar with Roe v. Wade knows this to be true. It means what the Supreme Court says it means and in over 25 Supreme Court cases the high court has used the term “separation of church and state” and upheld its constitutionality.

68 On Feb 13th, 2008, at 3:29pm, Paul Brodersen wrote:

The fact that America currently legislates from the bench and that the Constitution “means what the Supreme Court says it means” is what is currently true, and what is currently wrong with this representative democracy, in my opinion. The inference of privacy and legislation from the bench seen through Roe v. Wade has created a great many problems including the absence of 30 million from our work force, as well as the inherent evil associated with such and allowable practice. Now legislatures in conservative states such as Oklahoma, and many other states, have passed legislation allowing public tax dollars used to fund abortions. How did an interpretation of Privacy merit the use of my money to fund death? And how did the interpretation of privacy through Casey v. Planned Parenthood take away a Man’s divine right to take care of the welfare of his offspring? Perhaps a more literal interpretation of the Great Charter would have prevented our current situation. I don’t know.

69 On Feb 16th, 2008, at 12:07am, Harry Rockfeller wrote:

No one will argue the fact that the people ultimately rule.  Even in our republic a 4/5 super majority can change the U.S. Constitution, the supreme law of the land.  People choose to whom they will submit.  This ‘who’ may be explicitly self, for example an atheist, or it may be implicitly self such as Israel in the time of the judges when “everyone did what was right in his own eyes”.  When it comes to political philosophy, e.g., how should church and state interact, most Americans including most Christians do what is right in their own eyes.  The courts sense this and are “progressively” interpreting the Constitution to conform to their opinion of changing public opinion.  This attitude is called antinomian because it rejects God’s revealed law book, the Bible.  An exegesis of political philosophy is almost unheard of.  In fact, the only one I have seen is _Theonomy in Christian Ethics_ by Greg L. Bahnsen.

70 On Feb 20th, 2008, at 6:50pm, Raymond Reinhold Holmes wrote:

Seperation of Church and State simply means, “The State will keep its hands off the Church by not interfering with its Constitutional Rights.” We do not have a State Church like England does, although the Supreme Court acts like we do. Should we call our highest Court, “The Church of America?” After all, they legislate from the bench and treat the Constitution like it was a living being- it is not! They all swore an oath to obey and defend the Constitution and MUST BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE! We are protected by the First Amendment which should guarentee Seperation between Church and State!

71 On Feb 21st, 2008, at 7:37pm, Avalee Caldwell wrote:

Separation of Church and State means to keep the states out of the churches not the churches out of the states.  God in Heaven has always countries with godley leaders and punished the ones with evil leaders.

72 On Feb 25th, 2008, at 8:10am, Dreama wrote:

Greg, I have a comment re:your Feb.8 post("without some religious leader with a political agenda telling you who to vote for."..."Do you honestly think the almighty God, ruler of the Universe, cares who we elect...God wants is his people to live just lives.”
Our compass/guidance for all things should be God’s Word; the New Testment says as Christians we should be the salt & light. Salt influences flavor,preserves...we are to influence those around us & all things that affect us. So, my answer to you is Yes, God does care who we elect...those who will influence, protect/guard, preserve & edify God’s world. This is all part of living a just life; we are to influence everything/everyone around us for God,to help others find their way to a “just life”, including how we are governed & by whom we governed. By the way, the Bible is our imcomparable source of knowledge/guidance/education as to the way life should be lived;prayer the best source of guidance re:all choices in life.

73 On Feb 25th, 2008, at 4:06pm, Greg wrote:

Who we elect is important for our lives and our time on earth, which comparative to eternity, is a blink of an eye. I am deeply bothered when someone is asked: “How did you vote on this issue?” and they reply “umm the church told me to vote this way so i did.”

People should be able to think for themselves. The above scenario puts too much power in the hands of often hypocritical church leaders.

And yes the bible is your incomparable source of knowledge . . . ect. but many people use a different source and there are 30,000 different christian denominations to attest to the fact that there are numerous ways to interpret the bible.

People can use their own values, experiences, and judgments when deciding who to vote for, and for someone as religious as you no doubt are, the church plays a big role. However, to simply become a pawn of the agenda of your church leaders a think is the act of an irresponsible citizen.

74 On Feb 25th, 2008, at 4:20pm, Greg wrote:

I would also like to point out that the evangelical viewpoint on key issues isn’t united. Not all evangelicals are anti-gay, pro-life, conservatives. Red Letter Christians, who live by the actual, red letter teachings of Jesus support gay rights, the Democrats, and organizations that solve social problems like poverty. On the issue of homosexuality, to serve as the example, the Southern Baptists have a strong stance in opposition of equal rights for non-heterosexuals. However, the New Testament is surprisingly silent on the issue and evangelicals must refer back to Leviticus in order to oppose homosexuality. (Though they seem to ignore the rules about keeping kosher.) Reform and Conservative Jews, who use the Old Testament as their sole religious guide, recognize gay marriage.

75 On Feb 25th, 2008, at 4:32pm, Greg wrote:

Red letter Christians point out that Jesus spent his life on earth helping the oppressed and gays are undeniably oppressed in our world. A 15 y.o gay boy was just shot in California, for being gay.

My point is that no issue is plain black and white. Many Christians, although not necessary condoning the lifestyle, have seen the benevolent need for extend equal rights and protections to gays, as Jesus would have wanted.

When your church tells you how to vote, think the issue out for yourself. They can always be helpful but they too often have an agenda. The strong opposition to gay rights was a church creation and one that has started to break apart the evangelical coalition, especially among younger voters. Hate is never a sound policy and, as we have just seen in California, leads to death and destruction.

76 On Feb 26th, 2008, at 3:29pm, Roberta Franklin wrote:

Fact: God created us, He is and He is good. Fact: He knows what is best for us. Fact:  We don’t want what He wants for us, we want our own way. Fact: Homosexuality is a sin against life and God, just as fornication, adultery, lying, anger, malice, etc. are. His children, born of His Spirit need to live the way He says we should, do what He says is good, and pray for those who are missing the boat.If we live the way that God says is good for us, we will see Him work because...He is God and this life is not about us, it really is about Him. If people don’t want to acknowledge that God is God, that is surely tragic...but not really anything we can force. The criteria then becomes our priorities, whether we are willing to be rejected by the world to be faithful to God and just how far we are willing to go to live in truth.  All of it.

77 On Feb 26th, 2008, at 5:31pm, Raymond Reinhold Holmes wrote:

God is holy and He commands us to be holy just as He is holy (1 Peter 1:16). God is perfect and he created the universe to function with precise organization. Human beings were created in the image of God with an ability to take what God has created and use it according to our expectations. Although man can do many things, he’ll never be able to duplicate God by creating anything from nothing and having it work perfectly.

God created life by speaking a word and He placed inside every living creature the ability to reproduce according to its own kind. People and animals are male and female for the purpose of continuing life and sex is the means by which we perform this function. God created marriage and it is supposed to be between one man and one woman. When people obey God’s will, we progress; however, when we violate the will of God, sexual plagues creep in and there is chaos.

78 On Feb 26th, 2008, at 5:52pm, Greg wrote:

That isn’t all fact to a lot of people, and a lot of highly educated, moral people as well. What is fact is that thankfully we live in a society where oppression doesn’t live forever. Government processes will win out in the end and all people, gays included, will have their rights. Homosexuality is no more a sin than the hate and fear of the homophobes who preach against it. Furthermore, Roberta, why is homosexuality such a sin? Because of Leviticus? Conservative and reform Jews have had this debate, they are the experts on Leviticus and we have their answer of homosexuality. Btw, do you keep kosher? Funny, how people ignore so much in the Old Testament but decide to pay attention to something that they can use in order to justify their fear and hate of something that they don’t understand.  The Judeo-Christian tradition is supposed to be about compassion, acceptance, and benevolence. It seems like some denominations of that tradition have lost sight of what’s really important.

79 On Feb 26th, 2008, at 7:42pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Greg, you obviously interpret the Bible differently than the majority of us who frequent this spot on the internet; and yes, majority opinion has nothing to do with who’s right. I would like to mention though that even the ungodly http://www.theocracywatch.com web site recognizes what we are talking about here: Biblical Law.  They agree with the dominionist definition of “Biblical Law”.  When you consider the big caveat: they refuse to mention who or what is the authority behind the law they do want, they have a pretty informative web site.  I say, let’s get that amendment passed placing the Bible as the foundation of our government and let the prosecution and defense lawyers battle it out in our courtrooms quoting and applying Scripture - as Isaiah says “the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea”.

80 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 7:45am, Paul wrote:

Greg, you are partially correct, homosexuality is no more a sin than hate, and fear, or lying, or coveting, etc., but it IS still a sin. I have a problem with losing my temper, and it is not my right to act violent to people because that is how God made me, it is an area I am week and must consciously turn away from.

Obviously you are only interested in the red letters of the Word, something I do not agree with, but lets go from there. Christ said in Matthew 5:17 “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.” If Christ came to fulfill and uphold the law, and the law states that Homosexuality is an “ABOMINATION” than the action of homosexuality IS still a sin, and we are commanded to avoid it. It may be more difficult for some people who are tempted more in that area, same for abusive fathers and anger, or a weight problem and gluttony, all sin, all must be avoided.

81 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 7:55am, Paul wrote:

BTW, one can justify the acceptance of all sin, not just homosexuality, with the conservative and reform Jews debate. Christ brought a new convenant, not a new law. Judeo-Christian tradition is about compassion and humility; love-the greatest commandment; but that is not at all where it stops..at the very least, would the act of homosexuality cause some to stumble? perhaps the members of demoninations you are so down on? Yes. It does. It should be avoided. Our lives are not our own, we belong to Christ if we are a part of the Kingdom, and we MUST deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow Him.

Don’t be too quick to make such rash generalizations, Greg, disciplined discussion will produce more fruit than hot-topic sound bites. Your formal name is not Dr. Gregory Scott, is it?

Weren’t we discussing separation of church and state at some point???..

82 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 10:08am, Roberta Franklin wrote:

Thank you Greg, for making the point so obvious. You will never be able to understand sin, until you admit that you are a sinner.  Sin is an observation from God’s perspective, not man’s. Our nation will never be able to recognize spiritual truth, until we are individually in relationship with Him.  We may, as a nation, be able to agree that our Constitution was founded on a Judeo-Christian ethic and indeed, even on Biblical principles and their interpretation because that is historical fact.  We will never be able to agree that we are a “Christian” nation (as in followers of Christ.) Should we be? Of course! Will every knee bow, and every tongue one day confess that Jesus is Lord to the glory of God?  Absolutely! Would I lay down my life to affirm this truth. By God’s grace, were it necessary, yes.  Can I force you to believe it? No.  So, argue what you will, we each live according to the sovereignty of the one to whom we accede Lordship...and believe me, we each have a god.

83 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 10:17am, Dreama wrote:

Greg, in response Feb 25 post, I am grateful that God blessed me w/intellect,sound reasoning abilities, my own thought process...my church does not tell me how to vote, think, or feel about things. “Intelligence&education;driven by the power of prayer can be an unstoppable force”. “Religious"&Christian;are not always the same thing.I am a child of God; I pray the light of Christ shines through me.
That said: I do not hate anyone. My stand against any lifestyle that originates from sin is motivated by compassion. I, like everyone else, am a sinful creature; therefore my greatest problems in life were born out of sin;I have unfortunately spent time in the pit of sin. I see someone in bondage of sin (homosexuality, broken family, imprisoned, etc) and I feel all their pain, confusion, the inevitable consequences of sin and I am moved. I want to make things better for them;not w/i my power, except to share Christ, to point them to the Master healer who binds all wounds.  continued

84 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 10:20am, Mike West wrote:

Hey Greg, I grew up with a close friend named Bobby who chose a homosexual lifestyle, and as a result, he died early on from disease. The Bible is clear that “the wages of sin is death”. In his case, this particular sin of choice paid off sooner than others. Don’t be deceived, statistics clearly prove Homosexuals have a much shorter life span. All of God’s ways and laws are centered on giving us an abundant life now and an eternal life later. I say this not in judgment, but in an attempt to warn you. I wished that I had known better back then and could have warned Bobby. I am afraid that it may have cost him his salvation.

85 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 10:39am, Mike West wrote:

As far as Separation of church & state, I believe our founding fathers true intent was the separation of the state from any dominating denomination. Never did they intend to inoculate the state’s elected leaders from being under the Lordship of Christ. Providentially, they were allowed to make this mistake to fulfill end time prophecy that’s void of the USA and to test our generation’s resolve to faithfully make Him Lord of All. It appears that Dr Land has failed this test, considering he is willing to lay scriptures aside and instead wrongly promote the US Constitution’s true intent. Here’s just another case of following the “letter of the law” without any understanding of the spirit of the law writer.

86 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 10:40am, Dreama wrote:

cont’d Christ’s love turned my darkness, pain, confusion, lonliness into deepseated joy and peace;even worst of circumstances. My desire is to share that with others-not to pass laws that ultimately perpetuate their condition. You seem to want to keep ‘the church’ out of the sphere of influence of voters/government issues, but the government to influence/enable the acts of sin which lead to difficulties in life...we who know how to rise above the trappings of sin,are responsible to help others find their way to truth. Passing laws which lead people to further destruction is the opposite direction on the road to more peaceful way of life...the road to Christ. I have experienced the pit of sin;my motivation is not hatred of persons, but out of love and desire to offer a hand up out of the pit.Separation of church and state? impossible irresponsible. Ok, separate church and state if you like, but separation of God and state leads to precipice of breakdown of society.

87 On Feb 27th, 2008, at 1:14pm, Greg wrote:

Well, regardless justice will win out in the end. My point, by bringing up the homosexuality piece, is simply that you cannot have a nation run by religious laws and the bible because Christians don’t even agree on how to interpret it. Episcopalians have a gay bishop but the Southern Baptists preach obsessively against it. Like the bible the Constitution can be interpreted many ways. Thats why there is a judicial system. If there was no separation of church and state who’s interpretation of the bible would be applied? Therefore, by having separation of church and state Episcopalians can recognize commitment ceremonies between gay couples while Southern Baptists are free to refuse to do so. It grants freedom of religion. There aren’t nearly enough Southern Baptists, or evangelicals in general, to change the rule of the entire nation to follow their biblical interpretations.

88 On Feb 28th, 2008, at 1:40pm, Mike West wrote:

With or without “Separation of C & S”, civil & religious leaders have to have an origin of some kind of moral law in order to apply justice. The question is whose? Where is the beginning & end of all authority, man or God?

We must also remember that freedom of religion for all citizens is a different matter than who governs the nation. A true Christian nation would have a test of allegiance to the Lord Jesus Christ before he could be in authority. Sadly, we are not really a true Christian nation, our founders never envisioned a future time where civil and religious leaders would be anything but followers Christ.

My goal is not so much to change the nation, but to be personally faithful to God for what he has entrusted me. In my family, my wife and children have freedom of choice to serve whomever or whatever, but when it comes to making final rules and applying justice, I will serve the Lord based on my best understanding of the scriptures, allowed by the Holy Sprit.

89 On Feb 28th, 2008, at 8:16pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Here’s a question for you Greg:
“You can’t have a nation run by humanist laws because humanists (environmental, secular, etc.) don’t even agree on how to interpret civil law.  John Dewey’s and all other humanist literature can be interpreted many ways.  That’s why there is a judicial system.  If there was no separation of philosophical humanism and the state who’s interpretation of civil law would be applied?”

Isn’t this the boat we are currently in?  I think Mike West sees what I am talking about: Baptists putting Scripture aside.  Maybe that’s why Baptists don’t want to play this _BIG_ trump Ace on the table and continue letting the humanists get away with hiding theirs too.

90 On Feb 28th, 2008, at 9:12pm, Greg wrote:

And to Mike West. Just as an aside, since this has nothing to do with separation of church and state: do you think they have a shorter life span because they are sinners or because they are subjected to constant hate from those who don’t understand them. Many sinners live a long time, their punishment comes after death, not before it., because even the sinner can seek forgiveness once they’ve realized there sin. I believe, like the APA and other medical associations, the reason why many non-heterosexual people die younger, from suicide, etc. is because they are the targets of hate and oppression. Anytime a gay youth is raised in a healthy, accepting environment they live just as long, and as happily and successfully as any of their heterosexual peers. Any psychological study will show you that. There is no biological, medical, or neurological inferiority associated with being gay.

91 On Feb 28th, 2008, at 9:18pm, Greg wrote:

I am gay and have full scholarship offers from colleges like Washington University and I am top in my high school class, President of the Honor Society etc. I don’t do drugs and I run and do some light weight training on a daily basis. I am accepted. I have other gay friends whose parents are Baptists and send their son to therapy to make him heterosexual. He does drugs, will go to a community college, hates his parents, etc. The difference between him and me is that I am accepted, loved, and nurtured.

You can think I am a sinner and that’s ok with me. Its your belief and I am not trying to change that. My point is that when you treat people like they are less than human or what they feel they are naturally is wrong, then they won’t live up to the same potential as everyone else. Its a self-fulfilling prophecy. We see that among inner city and African American youth.

92 On Feb 28th, 2008, at 9:28pm, Greg wrote:

Anyway lets return to the separation of church and state. Which as previously stated, defends all of our diverse beliefs. Religious beliefs are for the church and tell us how to conduct our daily lives. But the state is responsible for ensuring that the Episcopalians can’t force the Baptists to recognize same sex couples and you can’t tell Episcopalians to get ride of their gay bishop. It ensures the American value of the freedom to choose our religion and to practice it freely.

I understand that many Baptists feel threatened by the secular attack on their religion, and many of those fears are justified. But a separation is needed in a nation of religious diversity. Iran has little separation but the whole nation is shiite.  Our religion reflects what policies and people we support politically, but the separation of church and state makes sure that the government can’t walk into your church and tell you what to believe. And that makes America great.

93 On Feb 29th, 2008, at 7:31am, Dreama wrote:

At this point I turn to prayer; not for enough Southern Baptists or “evangelicals”, but for more Christians,for all of us, for our nation, for our leaders, for protect & blessing, for all those in darkness of sin.
Psalm 128 is a promise of blessing to all those who fear the Lord.
1 Blessed ais every one who fears the Lord,
Who walks in His ways.
2 When you eat the 1labor of your hands,
You shall be happy, and it shall be well with you.
3 Your wife shall be dlike a fruitful vine
In the very heart of your house,
Your echildren flike olive plants
All around your table.
4 Behold, thus shall the man be blessed
Who fears the Lord.
5 The Lord bless you out of Zion,
And may you see the good of Jerusalem
All the days of your life.
6 Yes, may you hsee your children’s children.
 Peace be upon Israel!

94 On Feb 29th, 2008, at 10:03am, Paul wrote:

Greg, in response to Feb. 28th, specifically .."when you treat people like they are less than human or what they feel they are naturally is wrong..”, this is where the confusion sets in for me. Most of what we all “feel is natural” is wrong, it is a “sinful nature,” again, it is difficult for everyone, not just homosexuals, to “deny themselves and follow Christ.”

Your personal accomplishments have nothing to do with it. Neither do the bad choices of your friend. Statistics show that nurturing produces fruit in anyone, that is unarguable, the question still remains of truth, God’s law, Christ’s covenant of forgiveness ONLY after repentance, and denying ourselves. What made America great IS the Judeo-Christian foundation, creating freedom, not the perversion of liberal America.

95 On Feb 29th, 2008, at 11:53am, Raymond Reinhold Holmes wrote:

According to the Constitution, The State’s position should be to protect our Rights. What has happened in our society is the government has been influenced by Socialist Darwinism. Contrary to the claims of the NEA, what is being taught in our secular schools is not scientific but a belief in humanist principles. I encourage readers to study the lives of famous evolu- tionists and you’ll learn they rejected a FATHER Creater because they would have to submit to His authority. Proof of how our schools are perverted can be found in the violence, condoms, abortions, homosex- uality, and pornography. Thanks to evolution, humanity has digressed to a primitive lifestyle and all one needs to do is examine recent history to see how many related tragedies have taken place. Many of our prized liberal universities were started by Bible believing Christians. It’s all because our Justice system misinterpreted the Constitution by placing perverted prejudices above Freedom Of Religion!

96 On Mar 1st, 2008, at 9:48am, Equal Sexes wrote:

Greg wrote: “… enforce you[r] religious beliefs on others...”

No. This seems like propaganda to deny equal rights to Christians. First, the SBC & the Bible says that men and women are equal before God. Conversely, the function of homosexuality is to deny and abridge equal rights to both men and women in the name of ‘love’. This is a perversion. Same-sex oriented sexual preference is just as unconstitutional as same-race oriented racial preference (see http://www.gayanswers.com).

The First Amendment says:

“Congress shall make no law ... prohibiting ... the right of the people ... to petition the government...”

Religious people have the right to petition the government to make laws according to their religious conscience (see http://www.wall-of-separation.com). Different roles for men and women in marriage no more makes them unequal than do different roles in corporate or civil government. If no one submitted to anybody else, we wouldn’t have a government or equality.

97 On Mar 1st, 2008, at 11:56am, Dreama wrote:

Greg, you asked Roberta why homosexuality is a sin:
1 Corinthians 6:9
Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual offenders

Sex is meant to be a sacred union. I think our personal inner struggle w/such issues is God trying to guide us in the best path. Sin doesn’t make us who we are, but it changes our situation, brings consequences that could be avoided by making better choices. God gave us freedom.God gave us the freedom to choose. God’s Word is the guide book for our best life.

1 Timothy 1:10
for adulterers and perverts, for slave traders and liars and perjurers
Do you think that it’s ok for someone to molest a child just because it’s theri right to choose?  We all have a depraved nature to be overcome.

1 John 1:9
If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.

98 On Mar 1st, 2008, at 2:27pm, Greg wrote:

As pointed out by Paul: nurturing produces fruit in anyone, that is unarguable. Well, then shouldn’t we nurture everyone the best we can so that they can be the best they can? God will judge our lives, it isn’t up to us to judge others, that job belongs to a higher power. We can guide people as we see fit, but there is a line between trying to help someone and judging them. I don’t believe who I choose to love is a sin, you can’t change my mind about that and I doubt I can change your minds. But I expect that my belief is respected like I respect yours, but we should both be allowed to live up to our potential and live full lives, and let God have mercy on our souls when we move on. There are many different beliefs on this issue, you see your position as undeniable as I see my position as being undeniable.

99 On Mar 1st, 2008, at 2:33pm, Greg wrote:

There has got to be a point where we realize that we are all Americans and all human, and the values of freedom, equality, and justice for all are what make America great. There have been many great Americans of many different faiths and what makes America great is our ability to come together to forge a free society.

Sure there a plenty of things in our country that make me mad, but, as cliche as this sounds, there are times where I just sit back and think, thank God I’m an American.

On the gay rights issue all I have left to say is that I respect your position that homosexuality is a sin. Please respect my belief that it isn’t. Allow me to have the same rights and freedoms with the knowledge that it is God’s job to judge my life and well as your lives. It isn’t our job to be judging each other, none of us is God.

100 On Mar 9th, 2008, at 12:48pm, Tom wrote:

Eugene is right.  There is no Constitutional “Wall of separation between church and state.” That is a private phrase of Thomas Jefferson.  In the First Amendment to the US Constitution the Framers put up a religious door facing the government hung with a sign that says “Do Not Disturb!” But there is no constitutional prohibition from religion interfering with, disturbing or otherwise influencing the government.

But nowadays its backwards.  Religion cannot influence the government (e.g. via 26USC Sec. 501(c)(3)).  And without a syllable of authority from the Constitution the nine lawyers of the Supreme Court decide whether a village green can display a creche or not.

The People of course are responsible for this turn of events.

101 On Mar 17th, 2008, at 7:17pm, Angie wrote:

I understand this separation to mean a state cannot establish a state church run by officials of the state. At least I believe this is what our forefathers intended. Today it seems to be interpreted as know Jesus? No Jesus allowed in government,public or the school house....

102 On Apr 3rd, 2008, at 8:31am, Dreama wrote:

In the name of separation of church & state, God & recognition of Him, spec. prayer, were removed from schools to appease one person’s conflicting belief of the very foundation our government & constitution were built upon. Once again we see the ‘fruit’ of separation of church and state - 3rd graders plotting to kill their teacher! What source but evil gave birth to such horrendous, unthinkable nightmare scenarios as this?! Our forefathers fully intended & provided accordingly for education of American children as to God’s higher authority we all fall under. Clearly this is not being fulfilled in today’s society. Thanks to our so-called leaders passing law to forbid this (no prayer/scripture reading in school) our children are falling prey to evil. Be careful what you ask for & stand for America. A price is always paid for ignoring God.

103 On Apr 9th, 2008, at 3:32am, Lloyd Biggers wrote:

If/when Christians vote “by the Book” (i.e., Holy Bible) government will be patterned by and responsive to the model of the Ten Commandments.  Christians need to sincerely pray for God’s guidance before voting in elections and approach the process with their eyes open.  Too many people vote for a political party and not the issues.  Think of it.  If the overwhelming majority of adult Americans who claim to be Christians voted “by the Book” do you think socially convenient abortions (i.e., infanticide, the murder of unborn children) would be allowed in this nation?  Would homosexual “marriages” be condoned?  Would Christian groups be banned from meeting in public buildings?  Would the Boy Scouts be banned from public buildings because they promote Christian values?  Would profanity-laden sexually suggestive sitcoms be allowed on television, especially during “prime time” when children might see?  I don’t think so.  Christians need to live the values, not just mouth them.

104 On Apr 11th, 2008, at 5:23pm, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

April 11, 2008

In reality, there is no such thing as the separation of church and state. Looking at the historical evidence from 1606-1982(375 years) of legal documents(state constitutions, the US Constitution and other legal decisions, it is obvious that our founding fathers ever considered that the two would be “separated.”

When you look at original intent, and the definitions of Freedom, Religion and Establishment Clause based on the actual verbage, semantics, and linguistics of the times, the above stated documents were written, you’ll find your answers.

Rev. David Hammock
President
Revivals For America

105 On Apr 11th, 2008, at 8:27pm, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

To begin with, the “church” in America isn’t working well.Show me a church’s obedience, then I’ll show you a church working well. Show me a church’s obedience, then I’ll show you how a church “prays” to influence America. We have 600,000 + evangelical, Christian churches in America. We did have an 86% rate of Christians in the USA. Now that number is 71%. Now what was that about “church” and “state” working together?Only 72% of evangelical Christians are registered to vote. Only 70% of the 72% “ACTUALLY” vote.

The “church” needs to get its’ own act together. We began failing America by allowing prayer to be removed from schools in ‘63. Look at the issues. Look at the changes. Look at the influence of the church in American politics. What candidate(this year) really had the influence as a Christian and was supported by Christians? Christians kill their wounded. How ironic. Kind of reminds me of what we do with American heroes.

Rev. David Hammock

106 On Apr 11th, 2008, at 8:41pm, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

The definition of “religion” according to Webster’s 1828 dictionary meant: “Includes a belief in the being and perfections of God, in the revelation of His will to man, and in man’s obligation to obey His commands, in a state of reward and punishment, and in man’s accountableness to God; and also true godliness or piety of life, with the practice of all moral duties....the practice of moral duties without a belief in a divine lawgiver, and without reference to His will or commands, is not religion.” (Daniel Webster)

Actual words, intent, perception, judgment, interpretation and application are what we must look at in 1791 when the First Amendment was added. Then we go from there. The founders never intended for the adjudication of their intentions, or the removal of truth from the US Constitution or state constitutions.

Rev. David Hammock

107 On Apr 11th, 2008, at 8:53pm, Revivals For America wrote:

I don’t see a lot of freedom of religion “practically speaking” in America. I see mostly fear...by everyone remotely involved. How can the church deal with this I’d like to know. We court martial a Protestant Navy Chaplain, yet we permit Satanic worship on military bases, while a man in the White House isn’t sure if Witchcraft or Satanism is a religion, while it is given tax exempt status. We allow DOS Day on high school campuses all across America for the influence of homosexuality and lesbianism in public and private schools, yet we suspend kids for Bible clubs, bowing their heads in silence, “Speaking” on DOS days, or even “folding” their hands in prayers.
Bottom line....the American church continues to demonstrate cowardice, powerlessness, hypocrisy,and arrogance despite all of its’ raving at election times.
God have mercy on the American church. Then...we can begin to take a look at a church--state model, but NOT NOW.

Rev. David Hammock

108 On Apr 12th, 2008, at 10:29pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

Lloyd, How true.  I would also like to add 2 things. 1) There is no option for a U.S. Christian eligible-to-vote citizen to *not* vote.  Christ said to render to Caesar (your civil gov’t) what belongs to him.  So, to choose to *not* do that is, well, sin.  2) Who to vote for?  Simple, use the Bible.  Vote for a proven leader with a spotless track record in family, church, and probably business life as well.  Most criteria for deacons and bishops probably should apply too.

Unfortunately, 2) rules out the viable presidential contenders in both major political parties.  Hmmmm.

Are the pastors not teaching/preaching this or are their congregations letting the teaching/preaching in these areas roll right off their backs like water on a duck?

109 On Apr 14th, 2008, at 9:24am, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

Where has there been unity in the body of Christ in the pursuit of Godly leaders? Scripture does not say presidential candidates should have the qualifications of deacons or elders. Some deacons and elders aren’t even remotely close to being qualified to being deacons and elders, much less presidents.

The truth is, the world understands more and practices more unity than the church does. Why should the political arena or any other arena (business, education, sports, etc) take an example from the church? Some churches with 40+% singles who tithe, don’t even spend 10 cents in their annual budget for singles; yet they praise God for how wonderful the new educational complex is and to God be the glory! My point, when the church can exemplify unity, then they can shed light on the subject of church and state. p.s. Jesus never sought to clarify Caesar’s world. He was here on Kingdom business.

Rev. David Hammock

110 On Apr 14th, 2008, at 4:32pm, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

The idea of separation of church and state was a point of Jefferson’s; we all know that. The separation of state idea, never meant the (idea) of the {removal} of the influence of God upon government, education, or any other area of American life. If such were the case, it would be reflected in the state constitutions, charters, the Bill of Rights and other judicial documents. Two other points: 1-Unity does not mean unanimity or uniformity. 2-Diversity does not mean divisiveness. We need to consider this when we consider “church and state” models, if that’s what’s being done in a democratic society. Remember GOD foresaw all of this. What did our founding fathers foresee?

Rev.David Hammock
CEO
Revivals For America

111 On Apr 15th, 2008, at 7:55pm, Harry Rockefeller wrote:

David, I’m sorry.  I don’t know what you are trying to say.  You apparently agree with me that it is a sin for a U.S. Christian citizen to choose not to vote based on the statistics you quoted in one of your posts, but when I gave a Scriptural reason for who we should choose as leaders you shoot it down.  Your comment about Jesus not being interested in “Caesar’s world because He was here on Kingdom business” seems to imply no political participation by Christians is necessary, or perhaps is a distraction from true kingdom business. ???

112 On Apr 16th, 2008, at 8:54am, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

Harry,
Regarding Caesar: As Christians we are to be salt and light.Remember, I said “clarify” Caesar’s world. I did not say be “uninvolved” in Caesar’s world. The point I am making here is that as Christians we are not to “revolve our life around, try to find into, or seek to make our self comfortable in Caesar’s world.” We must speak out. We must provoke change. We have a duty to disobey all that evil stands for. Therefore, we must vote; otherwise we have said it is okay for evil to prevail if ungodly leaders are put in office and we have not done our part.  My point...do all you can, obey God in all you do, occupy until Jesus comes,never forgetting that “My kingdom is not of this world.” Thanks for your comments. Forgive me if I did not properly address it.
Rev. David Hammock

113 On Apr 16th, 2008, at 9:17am, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

Harry,
Regarding spotless track records? Only Jesus had that record. None of us are infallible. Many take pride in their good works, good records, and polished behaviors, attitudes, solid values, stability and consistency in their lives. Every great man or woman has a skeleton in their closet. I guarantee it. God gives grace to the humble. We have to be careful to examine the “beam” in our own eyes and only then can we help our neighbor with the moat in theirs. POINT: You and I were forgiven. Every leader has that available too. Look for “good reports,” management of their own homes well, good providers for self and family, benevolence to others, wisdom, love for the truth, love for God, family and country...I have a long list of things I look for. You’ll always find someone who disagrees with you...and rejoice.We must respect the gift of free will or we reject grace. Rev. David Hammock

114 On Apr 20th, 2008, at 11:52pm, Rev. David Hammock wrote:

The “idea” of separation of church and state was never intended for there to be a severing of the state “from” religion. The church (religion) is an extension of the people.  Man the world over is a worshiping creature. To sever the church from the state is to weaken the very fiber of our nation. Our founding fathers never intended for America’s religious heritage to be compartmentalized. Such would be an implosion of America’s identity.

If one builds a house, there are many different rooms in the house designed for separate purposes. The living room is separated from the master bedroom. MY POINT: Each room is still a part of the same house. The two rooms are separate, but equal. Each is necessary to make the house complete. A bit of food for thought.

Rev. David Hammock

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