Saturday, November 25, 2017

๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆโœ๏ธ Itโ€™s Time to Start Calling Evangelicals What They Are: The American Taliban


By J.C. Weatherby | 24 February 2017


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โ€œThe Council For National Policyโ€ is a Conservative Think Tank, made up of a whoโ€™s who of prominent conservatives; Rick Santorum, Mike Huckabee, Reince Priebus, Tim LaHaye, Bobby Jindal, John McCainโ€ฆ the list goes onโ€ฆ

This article, published by the Washington Post, but reported elsewhere, lays out the groupโ€™s plan to โ€œrestore education in America,โ€ by bringing God into classrooms.

I have said for years and years, the Christian Right is really seeking to establish a theocracy in the United Statesโ€Šโ€”โ€Šat least regionally, throughout the deep south. And this latest effort by the โ€œCouncil for National Policyโ€ lays further proof to that claim. This is an effort whichโ€Šโ€”โ€Šin spite of what many Christian leaders sayโ€Šโ€”โ€Šis NOT supported by the Constitution. The Constitution strictly prohibits the establishment of Religion, as part of the First Amendment, which also guarantees Freedom of Speech and Freedom of the Press. The purpose of this โ€œSeparation of Church and Stateโ€ is intended to do two things:

1. It protects religious freedom for everyone.
 

2. It prevents the tyranny of any one religion.

But this fact wonโ€™t stop many southern Christians, who feel it is their dutyโ€Šโ€”โ€Šas Christiansโ€Šโ€”โ€Što make the United States โ€œa godly nationโ€ in their eyes. And they will cite the numerous biblical passages in which God exhorts all nations to be faithful to Him and condemns those nations who are not, as the basis for this dutyโ€Šโ€”โ€Šwhich they feel is their right.

I grew up in this world, so I know what Iโ€™m talking about. As a kid, during the 1970โ€™s, I attended churches in Atlanta with my devout grandmother. I heard Jerry Falwell speak numerous times at First Baptist on Peachtree. I was indoctrinated into the evangelical way of thinking by a fiery minister in Smyrna. I studied my โ€œKing Jamesโ€ bible. I feverishly read Ernest Angleyโ€™s book about the โ€œend timesโ€ that depicted Christians being boiled alive by the antichrist. I loved โ€œThe Omenโ€ movies, wholly believing they portended something real. Trust me. Iโ€™ve been there. Fortunately, I had the sense to give it up. By age 15, at the peak of my adolescent sexual curiosity, I realized that any religion that demanded giving up my basic humanity was nuts.

Of course, not all Christian Evangelicals share this extreme view. Nevertheless, the extremists always give themselves away with their trademark refrain, โ€œIโ€™ll pray for you,โ€ as if you are possessed by demons and in need of an exorcism. They seem completely unaware of how this statement makes them appear; that they alone understand โ€œtruth,โ€ that everyone else is โ€œungodlyโ€ and in need of โ€œredemption,โ€ as they see it; by being โ€œborn again,โ€ and baptized, and accepting their world view.

This self-righteous arrogant presumption is at the root of all religious extremism.

Evangelicals in churches and state houses across the country support laws and political systems that brutalize and imprison MILLIONS of African Americans, that deny equal rights and protections to LGBT people and tacitly support violence toward them, and seek to deny women the right to govern their own bodies, often with threats or outright acts of physical violence. They seem hell-bent on ejecting science from education and replacing it with their own creationist ideas.

In doing these things, evangelicals are advocating a religious extremism that is no different from Muslim extremism, which projects religious authority over all people in their domain, which limits the rights of women, controls and limits education, and enforces strict adherence to a moral code, which naturally rejects and punishes all forms of โ€œdecadence,โ€ including; โ€œdeviant sexuality,โ€ science, reason, and any questioning of authority. Christian fundamentalists, if given the power, will do the same things.

Read more articles from Church and State, here.

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