Great post, Durruck, thanks.
Let's approach it from another angle though. I think we're assuming that we've had these freedoms all along, and we haven't. It's only been in the last 230 years (and only in select countries, probably thanks to the Pilgrims), perhaps a bit longer, that a large society has been free to profess their Christian faith.
I know. But our government was established with the freedom of speech, freedom of religious choice. Even if the founding fathers of the US had been Swahili-speaking Chinese Muslims, they still put it in that we have the right to express our beliefs. My Bible (the word of God) tells me that homosexuality is wrong. Rape is wrong. Murder is wrong. Stealing is wrong. Lying is wrong. If I truly have the freedoms of speech and religious choice, I can openly state that lying, cheating, stealing, rape, murder, and homosexuality are sins.
Where I see this becoming a problem is that more things are starting to be classified as "hate speech" in other countries, and we tend to do a lot of the same things that those countries do. "Civilized" countries tend to follow similar ethical/moral/value trends. One of the links above was of a British pastor that was jailed because he said homosexuality was a sin. He was provoked into her mini-sermon by the gay & lesbian anti-hate-enforcement officer (or whatever they're called - I read the article several weeks ago and can't remember the specific title)
Bowser said:
#3, I've seen this paranoia elsewhere, and I think we should refrain from it. Not only is it unhealthy, but it misguides us. We become fearful of something that never happened , and it takes over our thoughts, and creates an unwarranted bias against other people who think differently (I'm thinking partly of the Tea Party movement and the Michigan Hutaree militia, among others).
I'm curious, how is the Tea Party Movement pushing unwarrented agendas? I tend to agree with many of their movement objectives. In many areas, there is no "conservative" option on the ballot - the GOP nominee is center, at best; The independents are truly left-wing, and the Liberals are nearly socialist. I don't want a lukewarm candidate. I want someone that will stand up and fight for what the true conservatives value. If there are more of us than them, we'll win the vote. If not, the centerist/leftist/ultra-leftist will win.
Couple of thoughts here for everyone who has posted in this thread. I'm going to be blunt and shoot from the hip on this one:
1) You've been trolled.
Yeh, I know. I noticed a few days ago. The OP is not typically someone that posts in our forums, but also posted a very similar thread over in the SoE/SOE boards. I haven't looked into his post history yet.
Neirai said:
2) I would challenge that thinking. I spent my mid-late teen years in a small town outside Edmonton, AB. Now, I had at the time a gifting (the gift of foolishness?) that caused me to often come into contact with this sort of thing, but, of the fifteen teenage girls that I was friends with in that town, thirteen of them had been raped by family members before they were twelve. I do not say this lightly.
Pedophiles are more than just a "threat." Not if you are a young woman.
(snip)
The real threat of the pedophile, I'd say, isn't the ones on TV -- it's the ones in our homes, in our families.
While unfortunate and disgusting, that statistic is not unusual - from the standpoint of who the criminal was. Statistics show that most women that are raped are raped by family members are very young ages.
Neirai said:
3) Comparing pastors to pedophiles is like comparing apples to water dogwood. Just saying.
I was never trying to say that pastors would be the next people jailed indefinitely; rather that breaking our own laws against one group of people is a nasty way to get stuff started. However, if we're willing to ignore rights of any group of people, it is not such a stretch that we would be willing to do it again.
Nice post Bowser. You made some great points.
Durruck - preaching the gospel/spreading the word and making hateful remarks are very different. When I say this I have the Southern Baptist Association in mind. Picketing homosexual events with signs saying "God Hates Fags" isn't exactly spreading the word effectively. They actually do these things (i.e. persecute people) in the name of God, which sadly, to be honest, kind of makes me embarrassed to be a Christian. I am not saying that all talks about homosexuality are inherently derogatory or anything of the sort, but they can easily devolve into such talks.
But that isn't what happened in England. Besides, it's the truth. Sinners (ie, everyone) that does not confess with his mouth and believe in his heart, and follow with his life that Jesus is Messiah is condemned. While I may not agree with their approach to spreading that message, it does not make it any less true.
Odale said:
I am aware and I acknowledge that the Bible categorizes homosexuals as sinners because of the way their lives are lived. However, that sin is no greater or less than the sin the rest of the world partakes in. So what's the big deal? Everyone everywhere choses to sin - daily.
True. They are only marked among the condemned because of their unrepentant behavior and hearts. We're all wicked people, I don't deny it. I'm not even sure why Paul called himself the chief of sinners when clearly, I've got him beat. But the point is that I have admitted that I cannot save myself, that only Jesus is the Way, etc, etc.
Back on topic - I honestly think its a vast leap from child molesters to Christians. Too big. Even if the population of Christians isn't 79% of the US population (which I admit is quite high), we are still the most populous of any group.
And as long as the moral majority keep their mouth shut, we get weaker every time something like this happens and we do not act. I'm not saying it will be today, but if we are unwilling to stand for our faith, it could easily be in our lifetimes that Christianity becomes a dead religion in our culture.