| View Blog
|
|
|
|
| G-d and our Nation. |
If the founding fathers didn’t believe in the Christian bible, I would sure like to understand the logic in placing Moses and the ten commandments etched into the front of the building. If we were not a nation founded on G-d’s law then I wonder why the doors to the supreme court had the ten commandments as well. If there was a separation of church and state as we would be lead to believe, then congress wouldn’t have been lead in prayer every day since 1777 by a tax payer paid preacher. Nor would bible verses be etched so liberally in the stone buildings and monuments throughout Washington D.C.
If James Madison believed as the Darwinist do today, I wonder what he was talking about when he said: “'It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too often that this great nation was founded not by religionists but by Christians, not on religions but on the Gospel of Jesus Christ.”
The truth is nowhere in the constitution does it say the separation of church and state. In fact that term was used by Thomas Jefferson in a letter to a church stating that the United States would not endorse one church over another. It was said that the government shall not make into law an establishment of religion, this means a specific church or doctrine.
If 87% of the population (give or take a few) believes in G-d then what gives the minority the authority to change it? In efforts to make things fair you have effectively eliminated the mere mention of any higher power in our school. If we employ our schools to teach our children with a collection of ideas we need to prepare them for popular theories. For a group of people who don’t believe in G-d you sure seem eager to destroy him.
|
|
Posted by Tseirpeht on 2009-07-04 03:01:34 | Rating: | Views: 44
|
|
| |
|
|