While I, personally, would never send someone to MSNBC.com, I received an email today where MSNBC.com has a Live Vote currently that asked the following question:
"
from newsvine.com where you can comment about the Live Vote
Link
So what do you think? Should it be removed or is this argument stupid as some on the newsvine.com site say?
I figured one visit to this particular artticle of the site would not hurt much and instead could yield some interesting results. I recommend you try it just to see what people have voted so far.
Then I recommend you check out a link at the bottom
no but have you not been listening to me Leauki? Because if you had, you wouldn't have asked this. Maybe it's because we have been having discussions on different sites (giving you the benefit of the doubt). I have a couple of articles on my site and some of this discussion has been transferred over there as well. It's getting hard to remember what was said where. I am ok with the Constitution as is. I think it's perfect really. I'm glad it wasn't set up as a theocracy....because man would ruin it as they do everything else. The founders deliberately dd this on purpose and I agree with what they did. Go to my blog and maybe you can piece all this together.
I understand that and have mentioned that as well. The Federal Government left it up to the states.....but look what's been going on with the S.C. using the "separation of church & state" against the states today. The discussion was ongoing between AJ and I and if you noticed....he put up that above chart concerning state mottos and how they didn't have too many states that mentioned God. I had told him previously their founding documents did show this but I said "motto" instead of "preamble."
because of your comment......duh!
Sorry I don't see it could you please quote it for me? I pulled up the text online and the translation is the same as my KJV. I don't use any other version because it is the most accurate translation I know and even that one has some minor errors.
I would if there was only one true Doctor. Monotheistic religion believes in only one god, there is no need to pluralize the title. The major religions are monotheistic even back then. Most people that worship multiple gods usually latch onto one as their god with respect to the others in varying degrees. I know this because my mother and oldest son are Hairy Krishnas, (smile) they worship more than one god. Sort of like how the Catholics latch onto a saint or the mother Mary as their protector. In using “In God we trust” it still fits and serves the desire of others to feel included and not excluded. So no one belief is above another in the eyes of the Federal Government. Now if the money said in Shiva we trust then there would be a violation of the law. That is the name of a specific god in a specific religion.
This isn't quite correct. I too was brought up on KJV and love it but I also know it's not the most accurate. I have literally destroyed two KJV versions over the years by reading it so much. One is literally hanging in shreds. hahahaha...the saying goes ......"either this book will keep you from sin or sin will keep you from this book."
If you want the most accurate and literal...as close to the original language in English as you can...try the NASB.
Sorry I don't see it could you please quote it for me?
Sure:
ויהי אחרי מות משה עבד יהוה ויאמר יהוה אל־יהושע בן־נון משרת משה לאמר
"Now after the death of Moses the servant of YHWH it came to pass, that YHWH spake unto Joshua the son of Nun, Moses' minister, saying"
(I used the King James translation and inserted "YHWH" where the Hebrew text says the name.)
Literally: "now after death (of) Moses servant (of) YHWH and (he) will say [the "and" makes the future tense into past tense: (he) said] YHWH [Hebrew uses Verb-Subject-Object word order] to Yehoshu3a attendant ("minister") (of) Moshe to say ("saying")."
I would if there was only one true Doctor.
And that's your claim that "In God we trust." is not specific to a religion falls apart.
Feel free to explain this one
I would prefer it if you read what you yourself wrote. You put it quite excellently:
"I would if there was only one true Doctor."
The "one true" is the most specific you can get. The statement is either NOT specific to a religion or it is. But it cannot be NOT specific but refer to a "one true" anything. "One true" IS specific.
Speaking of the one true god, did you figure out what's special about the three letters in His name or have you given up on the "Well, if you knew a little bit about God" angle?
no but have you not been listening to me Leauki?
Perhaps I hadn't.
Just tell me now and I'll remember.
Are in favour or against the constitution demanding that government stay out of religion and are you in favour or against government not following the constitution and endorsing a god or two every now and then?
I am in favor of keeping the Constitution as is. It's perfect as written. Freedom of religion.....not freedom from religion.
That doesn't answer my question fully.
Apart from believing that the constitution as it is, do you ALSO believe that the federal government MUST follow and hence is not allowed to promote ANY religion in any way?
1. KFC, don't even go there; you said state mottos. That is a very different thing than state preambles; how else was I to know you meant preambles, instead of mottos?
2. I believe our nation was founding by Theists. Theists of many, many different flavors. However, I believe,and as the words in our founding documents support such, that while our founding fathers were Deists/Theists, their actions were to establish a secular government.
3. You know, ask any constitutional lawyer and he'll say the same thing. The bulk, if not all, of our nation's principles were based off of enlightenment thinking.Which, as I have stated before, has roots in Deism - which mind you, is a form of faith, but one that relies on reason.
Pray tell, if our constitution was based off of Christian principles, where do we get freedom of speech, or freedom of religion for that matter?
4. It is not a lie. Our nation was founding, primarily, 90% of it, on enlighten ment principles.
5. Tell me, if we were founded to be a Christian nation, or the founding fathers wanted to establish Christianity as the de facto faith of the nation. Then tell me, why do we have this:
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."
You know, it seems to me, a fairly reasonable and rational individual - that there is something wrong here. According to your logic and beliefs, wouldn't there be no need for this amendment? Christianity, sorry to say, doesn't leave any room for freedom of religion. Nor did the founding fathers put in anything that says we have to follow that religion.
Fact of the matter KFC: The founding father's actions speak louder, MUCH louder, than their beliefs or written words. They may have been, again I will say...they may have been religious individuals - I'm willing to concede that; however, they obviously had the intentions of keeping their government secular. Through the enlightenment principles.
Uh, no. Heck, I remember growing up and going to school and being told that I had to Capitlize "God," because it was a name of someone, etc. Even the rules of our language push us toward the Christian god.
Here, in fact, is a dictionary entry:
var interfaceflash = new LEXICOFlashObject ( "http://cache.lexico.com/d/g/speaker.swf", "speaker", "17", "15", "<a href=\"http://dictionary.reference.com/audio.html/lunaWAV/G02/G0226200\" target=\"_blank\"><img src=\"http://cache.lexico.com/g/d/speaker.gif\" border=\"0\" /></a>", "6"); interfaceflash.addParam("loop", "false"); interfaceflash.addParam("quality", "high"); interfaceflash.addParam("menu", "false"); interfaceflash.addParam("salign", "t"); interfaceflash.addParam("FlashVars", "soundUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fcache.lexico.com%2Fdictionary%2Faudio%2Fluna%2FG02%2FG0226200.mp3"); interfaceflash.addParam('wmode','transparent');interfaceflash.write(); <a href="http://dictionary.reference.com/audio.html/lunaWAV/G02/G0226200" target="_blank"><img src="//cache.lexico.com/g/d/speaker.gif" border="0" /></a> /gɒd/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [god] Show IPA noun, verb, god⋅ded, god⋅ding, interjection –noun
So in essence, god with a big G, is reference to the christian god.
1. In God We Trust has nothing to do with the founders and framers of our nation! The motto was first established almost a hundred years after the nation's founding. It was done by Secretary of Treasury Chase, because of the civil war and peoples' increased clinging toward religion, etc.
2. You know what is ironic? The two main cases that set things into motion regarding prayer in public schools (Engel v. Vitale [1962] and Abington School District v. Schempp[1963)] , were cases brought on by....religious individuals. Then of course there was the Edgerton Bible Case, where it was Roman Catholics.It seems the religious folks have shot themselves in the foot.
3. First off, no one *has* to not work on Christmas. Secondly, the date in question was actually, originally, a pagan holiday.
4. First: Only if you're Christian; not myself. Second: I don't berate, I debate, and...you (rhetorical) need to quit berating.
Okay, if you wish ot pick and choose parts of my statement that is fine. In monotheistic religions there is one true god and all the rest are fakes. For those that believe in many gods the believers usually pick on sometimes two of them as their main belief or god with the rest as minor gods subordinate to the one they choose to believe in. Again "In God we trust" is valid. It is not in the one true god we trust, or in a god we trust. I wrote what "I" believed and thought not what the constitution said. You just chose to take what you wanted and ignored the rest. Let us look at what the constitution actually says instead of paraphrasing.
Article the third [Amendment I] Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
So you can see none of what you object to is actually written in the constitution so your argument is invalid.
What say you?
Palidan,
The connotation and implication of the motto In God We Trust leaves no doubt, it's the Christian (Judaic, etc.) god. Our own language supports the assertion. I mean the mottow talks about one god, if you go to any dictionary or talk to any enlish professor - they'll agree.
In order for it to be constitutional it has to conform to the intent of the framers and founders of the nation when not actually written in the constitution.
Not according to what is says in #1, 2, not until you get to #5 do you even see the word christian and with that they mention a splinter religion the Christian Scientists, your argument makes no sense. Only you and people that choose to make the leap if illogic see it as you do.
and neither do I. AJ you're way out of line. You don't seem to have much reading credibility these days. How many times have I said that I am not trying to establish a Federal Religion? How many times have I said that the Constitution is perfect as written? How many times have I spoken about "freedom of" vs "freedom from?"
You need to do some historical reading....not revisionist history mind you....not somebody's opinion mind you....go back and read the founding father's own writings. We are fortunate that we have a vast library of historical evidence to wade through. Dead men, in this case, do indeed still speak.
Oh, and while you're at it......I got this advice from a person who spends a very large amount of time sifting thru these historical records. She said this to me when I told her about this debate:
My suggestion is to go to the 1828 dictionary and learn the definition of deist then and then look at the modern version of the meaning deist. And another suggestion is to learn as much as you can about the so called ‘deist’ Thomas Jefferson and ask people why he wrote a version of the bible using only Jesus’ words and quote them the quotes that Jefferson stated about Jesus. Lastly – have fun educating the public!
The Federal Government left it up to the States. That's where it should be left up to....... exactly as intended. What's happened is the Federal Government grew and grew and grew and the States virtually have no rights anymore when it comes to the big stuff. The Federal Government should stay out of religion all together.
The only reason we should have the Federal Government is to build roads and protect its citizens. The rest should be left up to the States.
I'm not saying you are, what I am saying is that your statement implies that our nation is conceived out of Christian principles, and it isn't. Enlightenment principles, KFC.
By the way:
1828 Webster's dictionary, entry for deist.
DEIST, n. One who believes in the existence of a God, but denies revealed religion, but follows the light of nature and reason, as his only guides in doctrine and practice; a freethinker.
Yup, that still sounds like Jefferson. Oh, and I do read his writings, and I also read other founding writings. I'm assuming you forgot that I've mentioned my fascination and, in some cases, fanatical interest, in history.
Also, mind explaining to me what your definition of revisionist history is?
First off, I should apologize for the terminology. I tend to use the word Christian, as an all encompassing and generic term for religion.
Secondly, the passage in the dictionary would have both god and God.
Thirdly, the entry clearly defines the difference between a Supreme God, and a god. The former being, more than likely, the Christian god. (As well as juidaic, et al.)Lets take a look at this again:
1. the one Supreme Being, the creator and ruler of the universe. -- The term SB is primarily a Christ./Islam, Hindu and Deist reference. It means, the one, or The God.
2. the Supreme Being considered with reference to a particular attribute: the God of Islam. - Again, as I previously stated. 3. ( lowercase ) one of several deities, esp. a male deity, presiding over some portion of worldly affairs. -- More than likely this references polytheism4. ( often lowercase ) a supreme being according to some particular conception: the god of mercy. -- general use, laymans term and possible polytheism reference. 5. Christian Science . the Supreme Being, understood as Life, Truth, Love, Mind, Soul, Spirit, Principle. 6. ( lowercase ) an image of a deity; an idol. 7. ( lowercase ) any deified person or object. 8. ( often lowercase ) Gods, Theater . a. the upper balcony in a theater. b. the spectators in this part of the balcony.
***
In the English language, the rules state that one must capitalize God, because of it being a proper noun, specificying an existance; implying an existance, and going back to the previously mentioned faiths. Why capitalize the G in the word god when it really isn't in existance? It, by the rules of grammar, is considered a specific person, place, or thing.
You see? Maybe I'm not explaining it well enough
I understand what you are suggesting and using your logic then sincce it is in caps it proved the existance of God. Seriously, the founding fathers clearly did not want a national religion like in the UK that was the purpose of the clause, The only mention of seperation of church and state came from the courts not the constitution.
Judas Priest, the minute someone feels they need to use definitions (and especially when they can't EDIT OUT THE HTML so they don't look like an internet retard), their point is null.
Therefore, whatever your name was new face of Lucas, your point gets killed by your reliance on 'definitions'. It just means you ain't got nothin' to say.
/bye
I'm glad someone understands what I'm attempting to get across; admittedly, I can be atrocious at it sometimes.
Actually, I believe Jefferson mentions a separation between church and state; I'll have to look it up.
You go try to explain points to them, oh high and mighty. Seriously, if your intention was to make a vitrolic comment, with no apparent constructive nature to it then fine, but why waste the time and effort? It serves no purpose other than, seemingly, stroking an ego. I could be wrong though.
Btw, it isn't like you're revealing anything shocking, KFC, TW and some others know who I am. Some have known for some time.
~A
Edit:
I want to apologize; my temper go the best of me. It shouldn't have. I'm just tired of the baggage of my past mistakes hanging around like it is. It's annoying to say the least; I mean, God forbid someone mature and grow after being an arse. Anyways, I apologize again - I was in the wrong.
As a Christian it is normal to screw up, it is better when one learns from ones mistakes and adjusts. I am not aware of your past and could care less. The past is only a learning tool for the furture. Some learn others don't.
Indeed, as a human being, a falliable, often quick to anything human being...
I'm with SC on the definitions AJ. Overkill was what came to my mind.
I'll save you the trouble. He mentioned it in a letter.....yes just a letter to a member of the Danbury Baptist Church. Pretty interesting that the seculars have to go past the 55 men who are considered the Founding Fathers (those involved in the constitution) and take what Jefferson said in a letter to change the landscape of our country these last 50 or so years. A lot has happened in 50 years around here because of that one eight worded sentence.....in a letter....mind you.
he's not a Christian. But we all screw up anyhow Christian or otherwise. There was only one perfect being who walked this earth and he was crucified.
Jefferson was a founding father, and helped influence the constitution through his correspondance. Go check the LOC, they even say it there. (But they're evil secularists right? )
Hey, it didn't seem like anyone was getting my points, so I went to the Amoeba level.
Yeah, see what being perfect can cause? Crucifiction! No thanks, I'll take being falliable any day.
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