Welcome To Our Community!
Are you concerned about America? Join our community, where you can post your own articles and content, without leftist censorship. Team up with us today and make your voice heard!
Join Us!

Does the First Amendment Require Government Neutrality toward Religion?

Conservative Angle

Conservative Angle Administrator
Staff Member
Feb 22, 2018
3,233
988
113
conservativeangle.com

The courts have said that our government cannot favor one religion over another or give aid to any of them. In other words, ignore them as much as possible.

But they are wrong, and we need to challenge them, our government, and the public, otherwise it will destroy our country.

If I had to summarize the basic, fundamental, founding principle of our nation it would be this paragraph from the Declaration of Independence:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

Our Founders considered it self-evident that people were given unalienable rights by God. The courts today would call that a religious statement. The Founders called it a fact.

Religious statements today are considered opinions or personal preferences, like your taste in movies or food. The Founders based the existence of our country and the cause of our war with England on a statement they considered true and our courts today would call an opinion.

But then you have to ask: how did the Founders know that God gave people rights, and what God were they talking about? It wasn't Allah, or Krishna, or Buddha, or Moloch, Baal, or Thor. It was the God of the Bible, and Christianity and the Bible were the vehicles of God revealing His will and purposes to humankind.

Our Founders also believed that liberty requires a strong moral code because freedom comes with responsibility. That is why the Ten Commandments, love your neighbor as yourself, and do unto others as you would have others do unto you were the moral code for our country for almost 200 years before the courts ruled that unconstitutional, and now we have secularism, which offers us tolerance, equality, fairness, and diversity as the supreme moral code.

If you separate our country from Christianity, then you don't have unalienable rights. You have only those rights given to you by the government. You also don't have what made us unique among the nations. All governments give some rights to their people.

Our country is in the midst of shifting from unalienable rights to government-given rights because the courts have ruled that talking about God in our schools and government is unconstitutional. We have cut off the anchor that made us what we are, and the ship of state will be pushed by the waves to socialism, and maybe communism and totalitarianism.

It will take a few generations until the old people who still remember the truth die off, and the kids who were never taught the truth and the millions of people who have moved here who we certainly don't teach them that either run the nation, and it's goodbye America.

The post Does the First Amendment Require Government Neutrality toward Religion? appeared first on iPatriot.

The post <a href=https://ipatriot.com/does-the-first-amendment-require-government-neutrality-toward-religion/ target=_blank >Does the First Amendment Require Government Neutrality toward Religion?</a> appeared first on Conservative Angle | Conservative Angle - Conservative News Clearing House

Continue reading...
 

JPConservative

Well-Known Member
Sep 2, 2018
322
302
63
Littlehampton, UK
It is rather ironic that those "atheists" who bang on about the separation of Church & State are utterly unaware of where that idea comes from, I think too many American's don't know either.
In the Summa Theologica by St Thomas Aquinas, he outlines the Christian Theological reasons why they are separate:

1) The goals of the Church & State are different. The goal of the Church is the salvation of souls whilst the goal of the State is the promotion of the common good. Thus they have different rules.
2) If salvation was possible via the law, then Christ died for nothing. Thus the Church concerns herself with Grace and the State the Law.
3) Necessary evil; The State must by virtue of its goal to protect the common good must engage in "evil" acts such as warfare, lying to the enemy, punishing wrongdoers. Whereas the Church, by virtue of its mission, offers forgiveness to all who truly repent.
4) The demonstration of sin. The State allows activities that are sinful so long as they don't interfere with the common good, because:
4a) It would be impossible for the State to enforce moral perfection.
4b) By allowing sin, the need for repentance and the Salvation offered by Christ is made manifest.
 

RichWall

New Member
Sep 12, 2018
17
29
3
Texas
They mistake "Freedom of Religion"(1st amendment) with "Freedom from Religion" with atheists not recognizing that their own belief system fits the definition of a religion.

Also the term atheists means to be opposite of a religion, therefore the religion being opposed to has to be present first.

Most Atheists are really "non-theists" because they cannot have a higher power in their belief system (today's non analytical graduates)(a product of today's failed education system that functions much as a cult) otherwise they would loose their sanity.

After all. I think most of us would agree that Communism (for example) operates as a religion, with the state being the higher power.
 
Reactions: Conservative Angle