Posted on Oct 27, 2014
PO1 Steven Kuhn
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Politics religion
Many people feel that the First Amendment calls for the separation of Church and State. No where in the Amendment do these words appear, but many people feel that is what our Founding Fathers had in mind when they wrote our Constitution. One of our Founding Fathers stated "Christians should vote for Christian Leaders" (paraphrased) and you can look it up to prove its validity. When I speak of mixing religion and politics I am speaking of the ethics and integrity of people who know they must answer to a Higher Power (I call Him God). We need people who know that the greatest among us must be the servant of all. The First Amendment prevents government from setting up a mandatory national religion and prevents the government from messing with each citizen's individual right to worship as he or she sees fit. Look it up and read it before you argue with me. I just want to know how you all would feel about having elected officials that were honest, had integrity, and lead our country with those qualities. I am also enclosing a copy of an article I found in our newspaper (which surprised me as they tend to be pretty liberal!)! I am eager to hear your responses. Let's pick up this topic and run with it! it would not let me post the Newspaper article, but it basically says we need to stand up for people who truly stand up for God.
Posted in these groups: 6262122778 997339a086 z PoliticsWorld religions 2 Religion
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Sgt Kirk Maple
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"I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians, your Christians are so unlike like your Christ" m. gandhi
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
PO1 Steven Kuhn
10 y
Sgt Kirk Maple unfortunately, your point is probably one of the most valid arguments I have heard. So many people get turned off of the thought of a loving Savior Who willingly laid down His life to restore our relationship with God because of our actions. Being Christian makes me no better than any other person. I still make mistakes, and am in need of salvation through Grace. It is a lifetime journey. I am taught from my study of God's Word that all have sinned (and we continue to do so) and fall short of the Glory of God. I have also learned that the greatest among us must be the servant of all. That is what I desire to see more of in our elected officials, regardless of where they serve. Thanks for making an excellent point!
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Sgt Kirk Maple
Sgt Kirk Maple
10 y
symbolic at best....
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LTC Dr Richard Wasserman, LTC (R)
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We need to believe in Something!
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
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While many of you are voting me down with no explanation as to why, I would like to remind you that I posted facts from our own American History that are easy to look up. The references I mentioned are Washington's farewell address, and the bibliography of our Founding Fathers. Also, the first two acts of Congress were to print up Bibles for use in our schools to teach our children morality and discipline and to print copies for each member serving in each branch of government. This can be looked up in the annals of Congress. The Supreme Court upheld Bibles and prayer in our schools for almost 200 years using legal precedent until the Supreme Court using no legal precedent changed direction in 1962 and voted the way they did just because that was their opinion. They cited zero legal precedent. So check the sources I have repeatedly given you and then respond. I have not tried to offend anyone, just tried to open their eyes to true facts in our American History.....that we can take pride in.
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CPO William Hughes
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Where do you get the idea that one must be religious to be moral? I would much rather vote for an atheist than one who relinquishes control to his or her god. How many crimes against humanity have taken place, and are indeed, still taking place, based on religious beliefs? This country seems to be more sharply divided between those who would have us become a theocratic state and those vehemently opposed. We do not need to mix religion and politics. History has taught us that and is primarily the reason this country was founded in the first place. Do you know that a recent Pew Research survey showed that the second largest denomination in this country behind Catholics were "Nones"? And you can look that up. The nones constitute almost 22% of our population and is the fastest growing segment of all "denominations". I hate using that word because having no religious preference is not a denomination. So, let's not regress but move toward electing people based on their qualifications and character and not on their religious beliefs.
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
PO1 Steven Kuhn
10 y
I believe that morals and integrity come from somewhere. I believe that the somewhere is always directly or indirectly linked with God's Holy Word. I am not saying that you have to yield to my religion or my point of view. Just look at our government now and you will find many of the "nones" you are describing. All I asked anyone to do was look up our American History and determine whether or not our country was founded on Christian Values by Christian men. The facts are there. The truth is there. So far, no one has looked at any reference materials I have mentioned. While I am stating facts, you are stating opinions.....

with all do respect

Steve
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CPO William Hughes
CPO William Hughes
10 y
PO1 Kuhn: our government has "many of the nones" ? Name 5 of them. And even that is a very small percentage. Do you realize there are states that prohibit an Atheist from holding office? You are stating your opinion, not facts.
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SFC Ronald Burris
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I agree with PO1 Kuhn,
To know that we are getting people in Congress that will do a fair and honest days work I feel they should have Christian values. I know a lot of people don't agree with this but lets look at what we have in there now before You all close your eyes to this reading. We have a lot of personnel in Congress now that could care less about the American people. They get elected so they can build their nest egg for the time they serve while Americans are suffering for their past decisions. As an example, One of the biggest decision made was when Congress decided to take the interest from Social Security so they could make it look like our budget had been balanced all these years. Now, not only is the deficit gotten bigger but Social Security is in trouble. Their solution to this is to raise the age so Americans get their earned Social Security benefits at a later time, or to go and have people invest in 401K retirement instead of Social Security. If Congress would have left Social Security alone with the interest it was getting, it would be solvent and we wouldn't be having this discussion. But since Congress is on a different retirement system then the rest of America, the American people get the shaft. And it has been Congress that has been making the decisions that have affected Social Security and the present trouble it is in. There are too many people in Congress that are thieves, adulterers, and just down right lazy. I don't see any of them concerned with the present mess we are in on the Deficit we have, nor any other real issue affecting our Great Country. The only time we hear from them is during re-election speeches about what they did, which amounts to basically, doing what they got elected for in the first place. Nothing impressive at all. We always hear about saving the Middle Class, telling us how they are going to fix the budget, more jobs.... and nothing gets done after they are reelected except, their pockets get bigger. As PO1 Kuhn, pointed out, get Christians in there, they know who their Master is and they know will be more honest and trustworthy. I agree with His assessment. I can understand there are a lot of people out there that disagree but I don't see a lot of them coming up with a better solution to the mess we are in. Look at all the personnel being cut in the Armed Forces. We were supposed to have an Armed Forces to defend our Country. All we think about is having enough troops to sustain several Wars but nothing being mentioned about sustaining Wars to protect our Country. It's always someone else we are protecting. The American people also paid a high price for Iraq and Afghanistan which has caused our deficit to grow to 13 trillion dollars with no relief in sight and within the past 4 months we have started talking about getting involved with Iraq which is a terrible mistake. We can go in and save this Country time and time again, but this Country will never be able to take care of itself. They will listen to anyone that is willing to die for their Country where they don't have to. Why aren't we letting the UN decide who goes and defends these Countries instead of the US sticking their nose into these domestic Countries while the American people continually pay the price for this. If we are going to fight in another Country, they need to pay us to do it. It should be the American people funding these Wars. Again, as long as we have the type of Congressional idiots we have in there now, we will never be able to have a better America.
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
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CPO William Hughes
CPO William Hughes
10 y
SFC Bell: And the sad thing is; we (the American People) keep voting these idiots in! If you take a look at Congress' religious affiliation, you'll find the VAST majority of these are what??..........Christians!! And this small fact is true; there have been Christians in these positions for a long, long, long time. So, evidently, this deterioration in the American situation that you describe has been brought about by..........Christians!! I say, kick all the bums out and elect freethinkers, humanists, atheists, agnostics, all manner of non-believers. They could not possibly do any worse.
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SSG General Services Technician And State Vehicle Inspector
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10 y
CPO William Hughes, I agree with you 100% that we, the American people, keep voting all of these, uhmm, idiots in. I don't necessarily like to call names but the vast majority of the 546 in office right now are idiots. Anyways, I do highly disagree with the assertion the majority are Christian. They are not. Bear with me for a few. What they CLAIM themselves to be and what they actually ARE are two totally different things. Many of those who CLAIM to be Christian are in fact NOT Christian. They just claim it in order to gather support and votes. I find this behavior to be disgusting NO MATTER what type of affiliation someone may claim, i.e. military (Stolen Valor?), spiritual, financial, education, ethnic, etc.
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CPO William Hughes
CPO William Hughes
10 y
Well, SSG Redondo, I admit I was casting a rather wide net about the majority being christian, but I'm only going by what THEY proclaim. Is there a litmus test for being a true christian? And who would be the deciding authority on who was and who was not a true christian? I'll say one more thing; If the requirement to hold a congressional office was to be an Atheist, many, many of those currently proclaimed christians would suddenly shed their christian cloaks and deny they ever had religious beliefs. Such is the nature of people like we keep electing.
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
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Edited 10 y ago
A few more thoughts on this topic...

1) When I took my oath of office, I used the word "God". To me, "god" means what it means to me, not what it means to you.

2) One of my best friends post-deployment is the chaplain where I'm stationed. At the end of every meeting I've had with him we've prayed. But I'm praying to MY God, not yours.

3) I've been to church often over the last few years and many times throughout my life. I like the ritual and I like the people. My son was a topic of a mormon's talk (retired COL) who was going on a mission and asked me to attend his speech before leaving. I'm not a mormon, but I attended and it was great and the speech brought tears to my eyes.

4) It's arrogance to assume that atheists don't have something they consider a "God". And you compare me to many of the top televangelists and I'll be willing to put my moral credentials up against their's any day.
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
PO1 Steven Kuhn
10 y
My question was never posed as an attack against you or anyone else. I do not attack, I post questions to promote thought. I feel the God that brought tears to your eyes is the same one I stumble to serve. I hope that even though our opinions appear to differ you will 1) hold no animosity towards me and consider me a brother in arms, and 2) take the time to check out the bibliographies of our Founding Fathers along with the other historical facts I presented. I appreciate your responses, but differences of opinions should stimulate intelligent and mutually respectful communication and thoughts. I hope you continue to share yours and contemplate mine.

RESPECTFULLY,
Steve
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SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
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This is really interesting discussion. Sooo....just trying to understand your point, you think anyone in a political position should "acknowledge" some type of higher power? What about acknowledging the citizens they serve as the higher power? Would that count in your opinion?

The original question is fallacious at best; it poisons the well of possible answers, suggesting that if you don't believe that the ONLY way to save America is to implement subjective religious beliefs on all citizens, and that the Constitution is some how ok with or can endorse that, then you want America to fail. You need a lot more than a random quote from a random Founding Father to back up that assertion.
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CPO William Hughes
CPO William Hughes
10 y
This was Washington's statement, however he was an avowed Deist, not a Christian.
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SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
10 y
Then what is the point of Article 11 in the Treaty of Tripoli? Were they just trying to fake out the Muslims? Ok, lets say the founding fathers were Christian, which they weren't, they were largely deist. But lets just say they were, lets say they established a "christian nation," that doesn't mean we would need to keep it that way, because we know now that to govern a state based on specific religious principles is an egregious act. You cannot make other people succumb to YOUR religion because religion can't produce solid foundations for their supernatural beliefs and authoritarians. This is exactly why they said we cannot allow the state to sponsor a religion, because there is no basis for government in religion; there is only theological conjecture. Theological conjecture has NO place in government.

Our laws are based on the 10 commandments? really? Which set of the ten commandments? Is that why it's illegal to say...blaspheme the name of god? To covet things or work on the sabbath? To worship other gods or boil a baby goat in its mothers milk? Why aren't these things illegal if we are a Christian nation? It's a ridiculous notion to suggest this country abides by these precepts. Just because here are a few of the commandments which coincide with human morality doesn't mean you can claim them as the basis for the nations jurisprudence and cultural ethics. As law enforcement I research these topics constantly, because I have to ensure that I apply the law equally to everyone, and that means that your religion doesn't get a pass over someone else's; you don't get to claim the right to teach your doctrine in public schools if people of other faiths can't do the same just because your religion is the majority. That is exactly what the constitution protects us from, inappropriate rule of a majority ideology over a minority.
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SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
10 y
James Monroe and Benjamin Franklin, self proclaimed deistic christians. Meaning, they don't believe in or accept the divinity of Christ but they are followers of his moral counsel. As well, it doesn't matter if they WERE all Christian theists, we know now that it would be egregious to say that the nation should be claimed a christian nation because pragmatically, we know that it just wouldn't work. It would eventually turn into a theocracy. A horrible one!
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SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
SSgt Tyler Mollenhauer
10 y
Unfortunately there ARE Christian deists, they just do exactly what most people do which is cherry pick what they want out of the bible and add their own stuff in to try to explain how their belief is justified. Serious note, I'm not kidding they really do exist. They're kind of...I don't know how to describe it, "spiritualists" who accept Jesus' divinity, but he's more a messenger to tell us that there was a creator, not the creator himself, and they don't use the bible as the source of authority, they use nature. It was a way of still being a deist or panendeist while being able to tell people you ultimately "believe in Jesus," likely to maintain social-face. Sounds irrational right? ...*sigh*
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SrA Joshua Faust
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The separation between church and state is purely legislative, the amendment to the constitution states that: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof". This basically means that a congressman can have religious views to guide their morals, but laws cannot be passed to hinder the free practice of religion in the United States. They may vote on laws in the way that their religion tells them, but they may not make laws to stifle anyone else from doing so as well.

So yes, it is constitutional.
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SrA Joshua Faust
SrA Joshua Faust
10 y
Nope, political scientist. And this is not a subjective comment rather, how the Supreme Court has interpreted the constitution. Take it up with them, not me.
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PO2 David Reilly
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First, which religion do you believe will "save" our country? What if that only works for half of the population, because only half of the population is a part of that religion (percentage used only to illustrate a point, as I do not know what percentage of the United States follows which religion).

Second, just because someone claims to be "religious", does not mean that they are honest and have integrity or honor. How do you know they are actually being "honest" about their religious beliefs and not just using the facade of piety for political gain? How do you sort out the actual honorable politicians from those who are only masking their dishonesty pretending to practice their religious preference?

Third, how do you sort out the different interpretations of what IS honest and honorable? What do you do in the case of someone who is devoutly following a religion and believes that it is honorable to purge the world of all other religions? To them, that is "honorable", because it is the interpretation they have decided is correct for their particular religion.

Fourth, there are countries which have decided to mix religion with politics. They are referred to a "THEOCRACIES". You may have heard of Iran? That is a perfect example of a country that has mixed religion with politics. It doesn't matter what the religion is, because there will always be those that come into political power under that kind of system who believe that they can, not just decide what you have to think and act like, but what you must believe to remain a member of that society. When I say, "remain a member of that society", I am not referring to exile, but to execution. ISIS, ISOL or the Islamic State is a religious political movement and they truly believe it is honorable and moral to kill or enslave anyone who does not follow their belief system, or convert to it. Once you put religion directly into government you open up a huge can of worms.

While I agree that having politicians be honest, honorable and moral would be great, how do you tell? I personally base my decision on who to vote for on their entire life history, not on whether they appear to be "religious". I think about their campaign and score them on positive and negative campaigning. If they attack their opponent, they lose points, if they stay with the issues and suggest solutions for the issue (not vague statements like, "I have a plan", but actual substantial solutions). You can never know what is in a politicians heart until they are in office. Politics is, "the art of the lie". There is an old joke that goes, "How can you tell if a politician is lying?" The answer to that is, "Their lips are moving". Promises from a politician are smoke on a windy day. Once the wind changes, the smoke changes direction.

Our legal system was pretty much based on three of the Ten Commandments. "6. Thou shalt not kill" (or in some interpretations the word murder is substituted for the word kill). "8. Thou shalt not commit theft" (or steal can be substituted for 'commit theft', if you prefer). "9. Thou shalt not bear false witness against your neighbor" (this is where the perjury laws spring from, though in several translations it is sometimes stated as 'thou shalt not lie'). There are certainly laws based on several of the others ("7. Thou shalt not commit adultery" and "10. Thou shalt not covet" come to mind). We follow 4. Keep the Sabbath Day Holy, not by law, but by tradition. We even account for the different Sabbath Days of the different "major" religions by having a "weekend" that lasts for two full days.

What I have shown in the above paragraph is that our government is HEAVILY based in religion already. Just because it is based in religion doesn't mean that it is always "good", per se. Again, it all comes down to interpretation of the laws that we already have when held up to the light of the US Constitution. The final interpretation of which, we leave up to nine "wise elders" who are scholars of the law and the Constitution. If they are all scholars, shouldn't this mean they have had the opportunity to use the same research materials and sources to make their decisions? If they are using the same resources, shouldn't that mean they would come up with unanimous decisions each and every time? Again, it comes down to personal interpretation, not a "cut in stone" foundation.

If our legal system, which I have shown to be based in one of the most fundamental religious principals for two, if not all three major religions in this country, can be interpreted differently by each and every one of the "learned elders" (if you haven't figured it out, I am talking about the Supreme Court of the United States), how is it that making certain that our government being run with strict religious principles would be any different than it is now? Would each and every politician agree on everything? I contend that would not be the case at all, because as with each and every decision you and I make is colored and led by our PERSONAL experiences and beliefs, so would those of the "religious politicians".

I am, personally, very devout in my faith, but I would never try to force my belief system on anyone else, because I believe in our Constitution and the First Amendment of it. Making the government follow strict religious guidelines, would by default, cause to come to pass a de facto State Religion. The religion would be that of the majority of the voters, because that is who would ALWAYS get elected and those elected would follow what THEIR religion says. This would disenfranchise all of those in this country who have a different belief system, because they would have no representation in the government.

Yes, our government has become immoral and dishonest, but more religion is NOT the answer. Having an educated electorate is. How many people do you know that say, "I always vote Democrat, so I have to vote Democrat again", or, "my parents were Republicans, so I vote Republican". It isn't about the ISSUES, but about following tradition. Until we can get the voting public to actually focus on the issues and solutions we will always have the same problem. And until politicians are actually punished for lying to the public we will continue to be mislead. Religion enters into it, not at all.
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
PO1 Steven Kuhn
10 y
PO2 David Reilly I posted that our nation was formed on Christian values by men who had Christian Faith. This can be proven in the annals of Congress and by reading up on the bibliography of our founding fathers. I posted this because I do not feel America will survive much longer if we cannot find leadership with morality and integrity. If you will just take the time to check our historical facts you can then let me know what your opinion is based on the facts......thanks for you response....at least it was not an attack like most I have gotten....

r/

Steve
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PO2 David Reilly
PO2 David Reilly
10 y
@PO1 Steven Kuhn The attacks are due to the fact that most people get EXTREMELY emotional when it comes to religion and politics. I see not need to attack you, because though I am personally religious, I do not see it as my place in this world to ridicule or belittle anyone for their beliefs. We all have a belief system, whether that be a belief in God, or a belief in the absence of God in the universe we live in. Simply not believing in God does not make one immoral, nor does it make them evil or vile, it makes them individual. It is when we try to FORCE our belief system on others that we start to become immoral. I am a Christian. I go to church, sing in our choir and our praise group, cantor during Advent and Lenten services and donate my time to help in the church kitchen for our weekly autumn dinners and Wednesdays in Lent. I do not smoke, I do not drink, I do not fraternize with loose women. I take care of the people that are close to me, as well as volunteer to help those I do not know. I take care of my 80 year old mother so that she can stay in her house for as long as she would like. I try not to judge those around me, because it is not my place to judge others when I, myself am not a perfect being. I know that I am imperfect, but instead of trying to reach the unattainable goal of perfection I try to be just a little better each day. It may seem like a simple plan, but there is a LOT of temptation out there in the world around us and being human we partake of those temptations, whether it be one of the Seven Deadly sins, or simply a case of human hubris in judging others to be less than we are. These temptations, if we fall prey to them, will definitely affect how we are perceived in our society. This goes for everyone else in the world, they are not perfect either. Was not Jesus "all inclusive" in his teaching? Can we aspire to be like Jesus without being all inclusive or even bigoted against others with views not exactly like our own?

Okay, I am done on my soapbox for the night, because I am running on 2 1/2 hours of sleep in the last 72 hours. I apologize if I got a little rambly, but that can happen when one is over tired.
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PO1 Steven Kuhn
PO1 Steven Kuhn
10 y
SGT Michaël-Joseph Forand the problem I see is that we have gotten away from our conservative roots. If you got caught having sex with a coworker or someone other than your spouse in the military you would get busted. If it happens in the White House (ie, government) then slick Willy gets applauded for getting sexual gratification from a hot younger woman. We had Bin Laden in our sites then, but our President was busy and left orders not to be disturbed. Lack of morals and integrity were found not only in our President, but in the fabric of American society. The people we elect to lead this country need to be the example and not the exception to the rules. The large schism between conservatives and the rest of America has more to do with a lack of education on the facts than anything else. If they knew what was being kept from them concerning our true heritage they would (or at least should) be outraged. Obviously, to date, you have not checked out any of the quotes I have listed during our discussions. If you had been exposed to America's true heritage then you would have been exposed to God's Word, and you would have been able to contemplate it from an early age. Instead of being against it, there is a chance that you would have developed a personal relationship with our Lord and Savior. I do not try and make you think what I believe is true. I introduce the idea into your head and allow you to make the decision on your own of your own free will because I am commanded to love God and then others as myself and to go forth and make disciples of all nations. I know there is an eternity out there, and because of the agape love I feel for you and everyone else I do what I can to at least expose you to what I consider to be the Truth. Unlike Islam, with Christianity you have the choice to accept or reject. Regardless of your choice, I will continue to pray. While it may not seem rational to you, or logical, or based in scientific truths, it is what I believe by faith and validation by the Holy Spirit. A long time ago a statistician was commissioned to compared the odds that we were formed from single cell organisms. He was an atheist. I do not know what variables he used in his computations. His comparison was this: Picture an F-6 Tornado tearing into a factory for the most advanced jumbo jet and computers. Imagine all of the parts being thrown together, the computer being programmed and powered up, the jet being properly assembled, fueled and ready for flight. These are better odds than the ones supporting that we came from single celled organisms. He became a Christian. Another example was when the Russians went into space first. They asked "Where is God?", but when the Americans went up they said they could see God's majesty in all of creation. Of course, these astronauts were students in school before the Bible and morality and integrity were removed and replaced with an educational system of no moral absolutes.

r/

Steve
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SSG Program Control Manager
SSG (Join to see)
10 y
PO1 Steven Kuhn There has always been struggle between people who are conservatively inclined and people who are more progressive. Our nation’s roots are in the struggle between Conservative and Progressive, not in one or the other. Elected officials who have affairs have been getting reelected for a very long time now, Democrat and Republican... most Americans don't seem to care, and since 75-80% of Americans are Christian, that means most Christians don't seem to care… which isn’t really surprising given the amount of pastors who get caught in affairs these days. The large and growing schism between Conservatives and the rest of America (and liberals and the rest of America) is caused because instead of listening to the same news broadcasts and reading the same newspapers, we read the news, listen to the radio stations, and watch the news that supports our world view and that of corporate America. The only way to fix things is to make an honest effort to understand what others believe, and why, so that we can have a reasoned and informed discussion. I applaud you for your efforts to communicate your perspective and where you’re coming from, however I don’t believe you really understand the perspective of those with whom you disagree.
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Lt Col Instructor Navigator
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So...who's religion do you think we should mix with politics? And are you advocating that atheists have no place in our political process?
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Lt Col Instructor Navigator
Lt Col (Join to see)
10 y
I'm guessing the many Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, Muslims, and atheists living in America would prefer that we not invite Jesus into the government.
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Cadet 1LT (Pre-Commission)
Cadet 1LT (Join to see)
10 y
Wow now.. Umm.. Sirs, let's just leave it at the following for tact sake: there's some good and some bad in all religions, and faith in one deity or another does not equate to the contrived notion of good, evil, or bad. Jesus was a great guy. Healed a lot of people. still is. In all fairness, the Jews (understandably from their militaristic background [hixos, think I spelled it wrong]) were a militant people and were expecting a military commander, not a spiritual leader. Indeed a relationship with Jesus is not religion, but the association with Jesus is. You cannot be atheist and have a relationship with Jesus or be Christian and not have a relationship with Jesus. It's kind of fundamental for that religion. In fact, it's almost like the Buddhist 'nirvana' (no deity or false prophets here, really more of a lifestyle, only very... religious). It's interesting.

All in all, 'they' will theoretically not vote 'that way' because of the separation of church and state. Just throwing it out there, but it's a good thing politics and religion are separated, otherwise there would probably be more violence in this nation. we start throwing 'false' around and feelings tend to get hurt. it's kind of a jab there.
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