Yet another "good Christian" playing politics with theocracy here in the
US.
Yes? Oh. I thought you called.
Congressman Wants Citizens of ALL Religions to Reflect on the Ten Commandments
That would be weird. Hitchems did a recent analysis for the New Yorker. Hillarious and at the same time sound theology.
first
weekend of May "Ten Commandments Weekend." This time, the resolution
comes from Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA).
He will get what he wants. Mention in the Church Bulletin.
Hell, I'd vote for it if I get Buddah's Eight-fold Path Weekend as well...
Then how about What We Think Jesus Said weekend?
Then the What We Really Think Jesus Said Weekend?
47 to go...
(I think It might be relevant to note here that John Quincy Adams,
although personally quite religious, took his presidential oath of
office on a law book containing the Constitution rather than a Bible, because he was swearing that as president he would uphold the
Constitution, not the Bible.)
Well, I think the constitution is profound but the bible is sacred in the
sense that it represents and is a symbol of an oath to all you hold sacred.
In Masonry you take an oath on a book you consider sacred in any sense.
It's 99.9 % Bible, but Koran torah, etc... is fine. (I still have my
Masonic bible...)
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