This is a huge stretch. The point I was making is that ALL of us, including the most fundamentalist Christians you have ever met, engage in secular activities every day. Point being, secularism is not anti-religion. It's just the lack thereof. Anti-religion would be, for example, punishing a student for wearing a Christian t-shirt, disciplining an employee for having a cross on their desk, openly discriminating against Christians.AGC said:Bob Lee said:barbacoa taco said:Do you fly at airports? Get your car repaired at auto shops? Go to a department store to buy clothes? Go to Aggie football games? Drive on highways?Bob Lee said:barbacoa taco said:I find it odd that people equate a secular setting with an anti-Christian setting.Bob Lee said:kurt vonnegut said:Jabin said:Except you guys won't let me raise my children how I like. You are increasingly taking away parental rights over children to fit your worldview dogma. You won't allow Christians to teach Christianity in public schools, yet you blanket those schools with secular propaganda.Sapper Redux said:
What I'm proposing is equal rights under the law regardless of beliefs. You can raise your children how you like. You shouldn't get to tell me how I have to raise my children.
Can you expand on the things that secularists are doing that restrict how you raise your children?
The wrong assumption is that "not religion" is practically different than anti-religion. Leaving children to their own devices when it comes to first principles: how did the world come to exist? Where do our rights come from? Questions about the nature of the human person and epistemological questions. The most basic questions that are the foundation for even just our ability to know anything at all. It's anti Christian. Our entire reason for existing is to love God and serve God. But just pretend God doesn't exist while at school. My kid's not allowed to sing a Marian antiphon in a school talent show but, if she wanted to sing a Miley Cyrus song about how she doesn't need a man and she can love herself better, that's a-okay.
School is not church, and simply acknowledging that is not forcing anyone to "pretend God does not exist." Individual prayers and other religious acts by students are protected. What's not protected is school sponsored prayer or endorsement of any religion. There are Christian student groups, moments of silence, and See You At The Pole. There are even some schools that teach the Bible as literature in English class.
Yet again, you seem to think the lack of special treatment is the same as oppression.
Secularism requires the removal of religion. That's what it is. How can it be anything but anti-religious?
All of these are secular settings. Does that make them all hostile to religion?
Oh wait, we now pray before Aggie football games and a lot of airports have chapels. So even those may not be great examples because this country is so accommodating to religion.
If my kid prays the liturgy of the hours, should she be allowed to leave class without being made to feel like some kind of mutant outcast? Or the parents made to feel like a burden on the school? You want to see what genuine disgust looks like? Take your kid out of school every holy day of obligation for mass and adoration, and tell them that's why you're doing it. The idea that religion is separate from education or education is separate from religion doesn't even make sense. And schools are purportedly FOR education. Eradicating institutions so intertwined with our history and legal tradition from all our schools' curriculum everywhere takes real effort and contempt. It's not that easy to do, and we've actually done it.
You fundamentally don't understand, because you have a distorted view of what Christianity IS, and how it's practiced. You think it's something you do in a Church building on Sunday.
This is correct. That's 'separation of church and state' isn't a Christian concept but a secular one.
There's a lot of irony in pointing out football - it is religious with rituals, liturgies, vestments, history and tradition, etc. Highways were built with purpose and change how people live - they influence belief 100% (some cities intentionally reject them, like Vancouver), airports are the same. Auto shops are run by people - they're not autonomous. Materialism is a facade.
Everyone's religious, everyone serves something; it's just a question of what they worship.
Now if we're talking about something like highways and infrastructure, that's not religious. I find it odd how you're trying to make that connection. if you are saying that believing in a less car-dependent, more pedestrian friendly society is a personal philosophy, then fine, sure. And that's a philosophy I enthusiastically support.
Now onto football (and sports in general), yeah, those can be "religious" at times in the sense that people truly obsess over it and worship players to the point where it's over the top. I've actually grown to think a lot of schools (like the SEC) obsess over football too much to the point where it's like a religion, and I'm not even being funny when I say that. The amount of importance we place on it (and money) has gotten excessive.