Rage
Against God by Charles Chandler, February 28, 2014
Decision
Magazine, Bill Graham Association
The
Ten Commandments, which were guiding principles for many of the
Founding Fathers who framed the U.S. Constitution, are now being
labeled unconstitutional by a leading atheism advocacy organization.
That rather bizarre claim in an Oklahoma City lawsuit exemplifies the
growing ferocity of attacks by atheist groups and individuals across
the country against public expressions of Christianity, especially in
government and community settings.
Just
as prayer was removed from public schools in the early 1960s on the
basis of the separation of church and state, another landmark case is
before the Supreme Court that threatens to outlaw prayer before
government and civic meetings.
All
over the nation, dozens of lawsuits and legal threats have aimed at
removing crosses and Bibles from public places. A high school
football coach in North Carolina was forced to stop praying with and
baptizing some of his players, even though the activity occurred
primarily at church.
Atheist
groups are also vigorously trying to strip churches and pastors of
tax exemptions.
And
in one of the most visually prominent examples to date, an
organization called American Atheists erected a billboard in New York
City’s Times Square during the 2013 Christmas season that posed the
question, “Who needs Christ during Christmas?” The name of Christ
was crossed through, and the question was answered: “Nobody.”
Internationally
noted Christian journalist and author David Aikman said there’s
been a steady acceleration of anti-Christian activity by atheist
groups over the past five years and that believers must rise up to
stop the momentum.
“It’s
a constant threat,” said Aikman, author of The
Delusion of Disbelief: Why the New Atheism Is a Threat to Your Life,
Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness. “Christians
have got to defend themselves against these proposed restrictions on
First Amendment principles.”
The
First Amendment right of freedom of religion is front and center in
the Oklahoma City lawsuit filed by American Atheists in an attempt to
have a Ten Commandments monument removed from the grounds of the
state capitol.
The
monument is deemed religiously offensive by the plaintiffs, who
charge that most of the commandments—except those prohibiting
crimes such as murder and stealing—would be unconstitutional if
they were part of Oklahoma law.
For
example, the lawsuit says the prohibition against taking the Lord’s
name in vain is a violation of free speech, the command to remember
the Sabbath is an “invasion of the mind,” and the order against
coveting creates a “thought crime.”
U.S.
Congressman Jim Bridenstine (R-Okla.), a devout evangelical, sharply
criticized those legal claims being made in his home state.
“The
question of the constitutionality of the Ten Commandments is
ludicrous,” he told Decision.
“People who believe in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob try to
adhere to the Commandments. … No one is trying to make them the law
of the state of Oklahoma.
“The
monument on the state capitol grounds is an artistic expression that
reminds people of the Judeo-Christian heritage of the state and the
nation and of the moral underpinnings of our civil government.”
But
tradition rooted in religion, regardless of its merits, is under
siege in these attacks.
In
Starke, Fla., a group of atheists unveiled a monument last June near
the Ten Commandments on the grounds of the Bradford County
Courthouse. It included the following inscription: “The government
of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian
religion.”
Even
a small amount of research exposes that as revisionist history.
“It’s
a flat-out lie,” said Aikman. “To make a ridiculous statement
about America’s foundations having nothing to do with Christianity
is a form of dishonesty that is quite breathtaking.”
Perhaps
nowhere is the battle more intense than in the current Supreme Court
case Greece v. Galloway, in which Americans United for
Separation of Church and State sued the town of Greece, N.Y., on
behalf of an atheist, Linda Stephens, and a Jewish woman, Susan
Galloway. The women claim that the Greece town board’s regular
practice of prayer—usually Christian—before its meetings is
unconstitutional.
The
Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case last November and is
expected to render a decision by June. It’s the first such case
about public prayer in three decades.
Stephens
is using the national platform to try to rally atheists into action.
“One
thing I would say to my fellow atheists is we need to come out of the
closet,” she told reporters last November. “There are many, many
of us and we have to follow the lead of the LGBT community, and we
have to make our voices heard.”
Aikman
said it’s clear that atheist groups are trying to capitalize on the
legal successes of the gay rights movement.
“I
can’t prove it, but I think the fact that the LGBT agenda has been
largely accepted in public media reinforces the claims of the
secularists that Christianity is somehow a retrograde tradition and
should be driven out of the marketplace,” he said.
Conversely,
Aikman said a Supreme Court ruling in favor of Greece could create a
huge momentum shift.
“If
our side wins, it puts into obeisance somewhat the ongoing attack
against Christian expression,” he said.
A
loss by Greece, however, could have far-reaching implications.
David
Cortman, an Alliance for Defending Freedom (ADF) attorney
representing the town, said the case has the potential to be even
more impactful than the school prayer decision more than 50 years ago
because prayer at government functions is part of the nation’s
heritage.
“These
are cherished freedoms that we have embedded in our Constitution that
reflect our God-given rights,” Cortman said. “It’s a practice
that goes on today in thousands and thousands of communities across
the country.”
Rep.
Bridenstine noted that each session of Congress opens in prayer, and
that both the Senate and the House of Representatives have official
chaplains.
Cortman
said the ADF is monitoring hundreds of related prayer cases around
the country, but that he hopes the Supreme Court decision will settle
the issue.
“It
absolutely will affect the entire country,” he said. “If it comes
from the Supreme Court, it is the law of the land and it applies
everywhere. [If Greece loses], the opposing groups will be more
aggressive than you’ve ever seen them. There will be a national
campaign to see to it that public prayer is stamped out everywhere in
the country.”
Of
course, that wouldn’t thwart the legality or power of prayer by
individuals or groups of believers on private property and in
churches, but it would be a historic setback for the public
expression of Christianity in America.
Throughout
the country, there are ongoing attempts to have crosses removed from
public property, from settings as grand as the 29 foot-by-12 foot
cross atop Mount Soledad near San Diego, Calif., to the 2 foot-by-1
foot cross that is stuck in the ground outside the police department
building in Searcy, Ark.
Perhaps
the most active atheist group is the Freedom From Religion Foundation
(FFRF), based in Madison, Wis. While the police chief in Searcy is
balking at the group’s demand for the cross outside his office to
be removed, the FFRF effectively pressured Stratton, Ohio, officials
to remove crosses that had graced the Village Municipal Building for
decades.
The
FFRF also forced the removal of Gideon Bibles from the rooms of a
lodge owned by the University of Wisconsin. And the group has won
preliminary court rulings to prohibit churches from providing pastors
tax-free housing allowances.
In
a related case, American Atheists has filed suit in Kentucky on the
grounds that churches should not get tax-reporting exemptions
unavailable to other nonprofits, such as not having to divulge
detailed salary, donor and expenditure information.
“There’s
an old saying that the power to tax is the power to destroy, and I
think that’s what it comes down to,” said Cortman, the ADF
attorney. “With the threat of a tax, you can control
organizations both public and private, and you can dictate what they
can do.
Atheist
and secular groups also have initiated counter-evangelism campaigns
in an attempt to undercut efforts by Christians to spread the Gospel.
The secular group Center For Inquiry announced that it has begun
sending alternative material to prison inmates who receive Christian
literature.
Cortman
said the growing boldness of atheist and secularist groups should
cause Christians to become more educated about and active in the
effort to preserve long-standing religious liberties.
“These
groups are trying to redefine America, and people of faith need to
take a stand,” he said. “The church has kind of pulled itself out
of what they would consider politics, but I would [suggest] that
they’ve pulled themselves out of the community because God is the
God of all things. He belongs everywhere.”
Mark
Harris, senior pastor at First Baptist Church in Charlotte, N.C., and
a candidate for the U.S. Senate, warned that Christians must remember
that the Constitution provides freedom of—notfrom—religion.
”Part
of a real spiritual awakening in this country is going to involve
people in the church waking up to the reality of what’s going on
around us,” Harris said.
“We
must not allow it to get to the point where it’s too late to turn
the tide. I am convicted and convinced in my heart that we have to
stand up right now.” ©2014 BGEA
My
comments:
Listen
to Psalm 2 describe what we are seeing in America
And
around the world today:
Why
do the nations RAGE and the people plot in vain?
The
kings of the earth take their stand
And
the rulers gather together against the Lord
And
against His Anointed One [Christ
Jesus]
'Let
us break their chains,' they say, and throw off their fetters.'
[All
the requirements of God]
The
One Enthroned in Heaven laughs; the Lord scoffs at them.
Then
He rebukes them in His anger
And
TERRIFIES them in His WRATH, saying
'I
have installed My King on Zion, My Holy Hill.' (Psalm 2:1-6)
Those
who love Christ Jesus must understand the Rage
Of
those who do not believe,
And
their ZEAL to eliminate Christianity from the public square.
This includes the President of the USA, his Democrat Party
And all like them; the Abortionist Murders and those who Defy God's Word.
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