Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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I wish those of you who find my faith intolerable would
consider this article carefully. My Lord didn't lead the
crusades. We his followers ain't perfect but ... please just read
this carefully(it's not a gospel message but if you'd like one of
those, let me know, I'll PM you).respects
When 'tolerance' backfiresPosted: March 5, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern By William J. FedererHow did America go from Pilgrims seeking freedom to
express their Judeo-Christian beliefs to today's discrimination
against those very beliefs in the name of tolerance? The journey of the evolution of tolerance began in England.
When Henry VIII's divorce was not recognized by the pope, he
decided to be his own "pope" of the Church of England and
eventually had six wives, their fates being divorced,
beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. His advisers suggested that to solidify his break with Rome,
he should replace the Latin Bible with an English Bible so
people there would look to England for their spiritual heritage.
Henry did so, but something unexpected happened – people
began to read the Bible and compare what was written in it to
the king divorcing and beheading his wives. This group wanted to purify the Church of England, resulting
in their nickname, "Puritans." The king did not think he
needed purifying, so he persecuted them, resulting in 20,000
Puritans fleeing to Massachusetts, where they tolerated ...
only Puritans. Roger Williams was not tolerated in Massachusetts, so he fled,
founding Providence, R.I., and the first Baptist church in
America. Thomas Hooker was not tolerated, so he fled,
founding Hartford, Conn., and the Congregational Church.
The Quakers, considered heretics, were not tolerated and,
with leader William Penn, they founded Pennsylvania. Within a
generation, tolerance developed for all Protestant
denominations. Another generation went by, and Catholics began to be
tolerated. Maryland was the first colony to tolerate Catholics
with its Toleration Act; Philadelphia built its first Catholic
church in 1731; and in 1776, one of 56 signers of the
Declaration of Independence was Catholic, Charles Carroll,
who was the richest man in America, and his cousin started
Georgetown. In the early 1800s, French enlightenment thought experienced
a period of popularity in New England, and tolerance was
extended to "liberal" Christian denominations, such as
Unitarians and Universalists, as they quoted from the Bible
and called themselves followers of Christ. The expanding Christian populace decided to promote
tolerance of non-Christians, based on Jesus' example of never
forcing anyone to believe in him, and that to be pleasing to
God, true religion was voluntary from the inside-out, not
forced from the outside-in. To fulfill the Great Commission,
therefore, those of other faiths should be allowed to come in
so they might have an opportunity to hear the Gospel. Jews experienced varying degrees of tolerance, but it was not
until 1851 that Maryland's Constitution was amended to let
Jews hold office. In 1860, Morris Jacob Raphall was the first
Rabbi ever to open a session of Congress with prayer, and
President Lincoln was the first to allow Hebrew chaplains in
the military. In the second half of the 1800s, tolerance was extended to
monotheists – anyone believing in one God. U.S. coins were
inscribed with the National Motto, "In God We Trust," – not
"gods." Oaths of office ended with "So Help Me God," – not
"gods." A monotheistic God was acknowledged in federal
courts, which open with the invocation "God save the United
States and this honorable court." Presidents acknowledged
God in their Inaugural Addresses, and each of the 50 state
constitutions made reference to God. Many state constitutions forbade citizenship to Chinese,
Japanese and other "Mongolian" races, in part because they
were polytheists, believing in many gods. In the early 1900s,
tolerance began to expand to polytheists and finally believers
in any other religion. Then, in the last half of the 1900s, tolerance went out to
atheists, secular humanists and the anti-religious. Today, the government's World Factbook link lists the United
States as being 78 percent Christian (52 percent Protestant,
24 percent Catholic, 2 percent Mormon), 1 percent Jewish, 1
percent Muslim, 10 percent other, and 10 percent none. Ten
years ago, it listed the country as 84 percent Christian. But
back at the time of America's founding, this percentage was
well over 90 percent. America's predominately Christian founders – basing their
concept on the Golden Rule from Jesus' Sermon on the Mount,
"do unto others as you would have them do undo you," and
Jesus' example of never forcing anyone to believe in him –
enlarged the circle of tolerance by attempting to find common
ground with the newly arrived immigrants and newly invented
beliefs. The problem today is those "not believing" are now
demonstrating intolerance to those "believing," as seen by
many activist court cases to remove God from the Pledge,
prohibit Ten Commandments monuments, erase Judeo-
Christian symbols off city seals, stop prayer at school ball
games and graduations, ban Boy Scouts and Salvation Army,
and censor historical documents. They are, in effect,
establishing a State Religion of Atheistic Secular Humanism. President Reagan, Feb. 25, 1984, stated: "We're told our
children have no right to pray in school. Nonsense. The
pendulum has swung too far toward intolerance against
genuine religious freedom. It is time to redress the balance."
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=43160
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
I wish those of you who find my faith intolerable would
consider this article carefully. My Lord didn't lead the
crusades. We his followers ain't perfect but ... please just read
this carefully(it's not a gospel message but if you'd like one of
those, let me know, I'll PM you).respects
When 'tolerance' backfiresPosted: March 5, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern By William J. FedererHow did America go from Pilgrims seeking freedom to
express their Judeo-Christian beliefs to today's discrimination
against those very beliefs in the name of tolerance? The journey of the evolution of tolerance began in England.
When Henry VIII's divorce was not recognized by the pope, he
decided to be his own "pope" of the Church of England and
eventually had six wives, their fates being divorced,
beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. His advisers suggested that to solidify his break with Rome,
he should replace the Latin Bible with an English Bible so
people there would look to England for their spiritual heritage.
Henry did so, but something unexpected happened – people
began to read the Bible and compare what was written in it to
the king divorcing and beheading his wives. This group wanted to purify the Church of England, resulting
in their nickname, "Puritans." The king did not think he
needed purifying, so he persecuted them, resulting in 20,000
Puritans fleeing to Massachusetts, where they tolerated ...
only Puritans. Roger Williams was not tolerated in Massachusetts, so he fled,
founding Providence, R.I., and the first Baptist church in
America. Thomas Hooker was not tolerated, so he fled,
founding Hartford, Conn., and the Congregational Church.
The Quakers, considered heretics, were not tolerated and,
with leader William Penn, they founded Pennsylvania. Within a
generation, tolerance developed for all Protestant
denominations. Another generation went by, and Catholics began to be
tolerated. Maryland was the first colony to tolerate Catholics
with its Toleration Act; Philadelphia built its first Catholic
church in 1731; and in 1776, one of 56 signers of the
Declaration of Independence was Catholic, Charles Carroll,
who was the richest man in America, and his cousin started
Georgetown. In the early 1800s, French enlightenment thought experienced
a period of popularity in New England, and tolerance was
extended to "liberal" Christian denominations, such as
Unitarians and Universalists, as they quoted from the Bible
and called themselves followers of Christ. The expanding Christian populace decided to promote
tolerance of non-Christians, based on Jesus' example of never
forcing anyone to believe in him, and that to be pleasing to
God, true religion was voluntary from the inside-out, not
forced from the outside-in. To fulfill the Great Commission,
therefore, those of other faiths should be allowed to come in
so they might have an opportunity to hear the Gospel. Jews experienced varying degrees of tolerance, but it was not
until 1851 that Maryland's Constitution was amended to let
Jews hold office. In 1860, Morris Jacob Raphall was the first
Rabbi ever to open a session of Congress with prayer, and
President Lincoln was the first to allow Hebrew chaplains in
the military. In the second half of the 1800s, tolerance was extended to
monotheists – anyone believing in one God. U.S. coins were
inscribed with the National Motto, "In God We Trust," – not
"gods." Oaths of office ended with "So Help Me God," – not
"gods." A monotheistic God was acknowledged in federal
courts, which open with the invocation "God save the United
States and this honorable court." Presidents acknowledged
God in their Inaugural Addresses, and each of the 50 state
constitutions made reference to God. Many state constitutions forbade citizenship to Chinese,
Japanese and other "Mongolian" races, in part because they
were polytheists, believing in many gods. In the early 1900s,
tolerance began to expand to polytheists and finally believers
in any other religion. Then, in the last half of the 1900s, tolerance went out to
atheists, secular humanists and the anti-religious. Today, the government's World Factbook link lists the United
States as being 78 percent Christian (52 percent Protestant,
24 percent Catholic, 2 percent Mormon), 1 percent Jewish, 1
percent Muslim, 10 percent other, and 10 percent none. Ten
years ago, it listed the country as 84 percent Christian. But
back at the time of America's founding, this percentage was
well over 90 percent. America's predominately Christian founders – basing their
concept on the Golden Rule from Jesus' Sermon on the Mount,
"do unto others as you would have them do undo you," and
Jesus' example of never forcing anyone to believe in him –
enlarged the circle of tolerance by attempting to find common
ground with the newly arrived immigrants and newly invented
beliefs. The problem today is those "not believing" are now
demonstrating intolerance to those "believing," as seen by
many activist court cases to remove God from the Pledge,
prohibit Ten Commandments monuments, erase Judeo-
Christian symbols off city seals, stop prayer at school ball
games and graduations, ban Boy Scouts and Salvation Army,
and censor historical documents. They are, in effect,
establishing a State Religion of Atheistic Secular Humanism. President Reagan, Feb. 25, 1984, stated: "We're told our
children have no right to pray in school. Nonsense. The
pendulum has swung too far toward intolerance against
genuine religious freedom. It is time to redress the balance."
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=43160
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
