Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:kurt vonnegut said:
To what extent should we be beholden to the original views of the founding fathers?
We could argue all day about the intentions of the founding fathers in establishing Christianity as having a position of privilege, but why do we care? Most of these Christian founding fathers also believed in kidnapping, murdering, raping, and enslaving people with black skin. I trust we all agree with our society's decision to abandon the overt racism of our founding fathers. We are quick to disregard some of their views in discussions about some topics, yet, we hold certain interpretations of their ambiguous religious intentions as sacred? Why?
We should asking, what should the government be today? What do you want the government's role to be? Should they be a religious authority or no?
That's easy. To the extent that their views are good and true. To the extent that they weren't, we shouldn't.
I'm not lionizing the founding fathers. I'm saying the Constitution doesn't give permission to be hedonistic.
How, exactly, is that decided?
It's not decided. It's discovered by using our intellect to apply reason to facts about humanity and the world around us. And we read Scripture, Dante, Aquinas, Augustine, etc.