A couple of problematic issues here.mentalgymnast wrote: ↑Mon Jul 20, 2020 9:10 pmReligious institutions have the right to assert themselves into the legal process within a pluralistic society. Secularists have the right to do the same thing.
First, you compare religious institutions with "secularists" in the context of legal rights. These are not comparable categories when dealing with concepts like rights. Secularists are not institutionalized but must by default refer to individuals with some common basis of belief. You can't write a letter to "the secularists" and expect to receive a response. It's also bogus to put a halo over legal rights when most issues involving religions complaining about rights involve civil rights. Institutions and individuals have very different claims when it comes to rights.
This in turn affects the meaning of your claim that "religious institutions have the right to assert themselves into the legal process". There is reasonable Supreme Court case precedent that paints clear boundaries on individual religious freedom that preempts the claim religious beliefs override the law. As an individual, you don't get to claim a murder was ok because you were practicing blood atonement necessary for someone to be saved even though it was clearly taught by early church leadership. Once established, the law has to be the law for everyone for there to be a just society. Individuals and institutions are certainly free to weigh in on the debate over the law but that comes with provisions for each category.
What seems to occur with your thinking is the idea religion represents a higher law above the law of the land. You believe, as is your right, this law came from God and therefore applies to everyone. Ok. This idea is held by people with views of what is "gods law" that contradict your own. People believe God has decreed a host of contradictory rules and definitions for what people ought to do. By necessity you are simply asserting you belief should be privileged over that of others and made the law of the land. Not by debate over the merits of the rule itself but by divine right of your belief to a unique status over that of others. Simply asserting an idea is espoused by your God isn't engaging in civic debate. It's attempting to impose a theocratic tyranny over others who do not share your beliefs.
That's cheap of you. I sincerely thought if we were engaging in discussion on certain topics the result might stray a bit but still be related to the topic. According to this, it was never about the OP or other topics that arose. In your mind, it was always about your Manichean worldview? Don't you see why that's messed up? You aren't living honestly or being a genuine person if the above is true.It doesn’t surprise me at all that we ended up at this place.honorentheos wrote: Anyway, it took a while to get here but it wasn't where I thought we'd end up.
No they didn't, or at least not the way you are portraying it. This is Bill O'Reilly/Glen Beck perversions of history. I guarantee if you spent time reading the writings directly of Madison, Franklin, Jefferson and the like you will find both varied views on this topic and a general belief in fundamental ideals that aren't religious in the sense we are speaking of religion in this thread.The founders of our nation suggested that this republic would only continue to exist with a people who believe in a God given set of laws and rights. There is movement to move away from that ideal set up and initiated by the original constitutionalists.
You can start here:
https://books.google.com/books/about/Th ... ead_button