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I am sorry that it took me longer to start this thread than I planned. The telephone kept ringing! Trust real life to interrupt cyber life every time something on the Internet really interests you!
I wanted to start this thread with a quotation from JaneSmith. She wrote some things, addressed to one forum member, in a Hangout thread that piqued my interest.
JaneSmith » 28 Oct 2014 11:33:
"...you are clearly a Christian who is upset and offended by a joke made at the expense of a specific part of your mythology, that Mary, mother of Jesus, was a virgin when she gave birth.
I understand that the stories told in the bible are held to be true and sacred by many. I also understand that when someone comes along and suggests it might not be true, it can cut to the bone. These beliefs are part of who you are as a person, and it can feel like a personal attack.
I'm truly sorry you are feeling badly about this.
You must realise, however, that using hurt feelings to keep religion sacred is a silencing tactic. Remember when much of the Muslim world rioted because their feelings were hurt by a cartoon? There must be freedom to speak and question.
Likening parthenogenesis to the virgin birth is a funny comparison, because it is science bumping up against faith.
I wrote my piece earlier to express my position on the topic of freedom of thought and speech, not to defend anyone else. And that freedom of inquiry of course includes questioning atheism. I never said otherwise and you are grossly misinterpreting if you got that from my words. Everyone has the right to believe whatever they want. They do not have the right to demand respect for those beliefs nor do they have the right to not be offended.
I, personally, am a huge proponent of science. I am vehemently against the teaching of "creationism" as an equal to evolution as if it were a science in the public schools of my country (the US). I believe in evolution. I do not take the Bible literally.
However, I believe that privately run Protestant church schools should have the right to teach creationism and to teach that the Bible is the literal truth of God. I believe that privately run Roman Catholic schools should have the right to teach intercessionist prayers like the "Hail, Mary" or other prayers to saints asking them them to intercede with God, since it is the belief of Roman Catholics that saints have the power to do that. This is so because, as an American, I believe in freedom of religion...and freedom from religion as well. I am against prayer in public places. I am against the display of crosses on public grounds.
A local firehouse in an Italian part of our town always had a cross in lights at Christmas. It always irked me. Finally there was protest and the cross was taken down. The neighbors were incensed and, in protest, put crosses up everywhere in the neighborhood all over their lawns. It was as if they were saying, "Take that, you heathens! We'll show you! We'll give you crosses! You can't take our cross away from us!"
And the crosses made me happy.
They were where-in my opinion-they belonged.
People have a right to celebrate their religion. They have a right to be free to have crosses and not to be disturbed in the celebration of their faith. Not to be intimidated or mocked or slighted.
But they do not have the right to push their religion on others...i.e.to put them into a shared (public) area.
That's just my first thought on things. Please respond!!!
Deb/AGBF

I wanted to start this thread with a quotation from JaneSmith. She wrote some things, addressed to one forum member, in a Hangout thread that piqued my interest.
JaneSmith » 28 Oct 2014 11:33:
"...you are clearly a Christian who is upset and offended by a joke made at the expense of a specific part of your mythology, that Mary, mother of Jesus, was a virgin when she gave birth.
I understand that the stories told in the bible are held to be true and sacred by many. I also understand that when someone comes along and suggests it might not be true, it can cut to the bone. These beliefs are part of who you are as a person, and it can feel like a personal attack.
I'm truly sorry you are feeling badly about this.
You must realise, however, that using hurt feelings to keep religion sacred is a silencing tactic. Remember when much of the Muslim world rioted because their feelings were hurt by a cartoon? There must be freedom to speak and question.
Likening parthenogenesis to the virgin birth is a funny comparison, because it is science bumping up against faith.
I wrote my piece earlier to express my position on the topic of freedom of thought and speech, not to defend anyone else. And that freedom of inquiry of course includes questioning atheism. I never said otherwise and you are grossly misinterpreting if you got that from my words. Everyone has the right to believe whatever they want. They do not have the right to demand respect for those beliefs nor do they have the right to not be offended.
...
"I, personally, am a huge proponent of science. I am vehemently against the teaching of "creationism" as an equal to evolution as if it were a science in the public schools of my country (the US). I believe in evolution. I do not take the Bible literally.
However, I believe that privately run Protestant church schools should have the right to teach creationism and to teach that the Bible is the literal truth of God. I believe that privately run Roman Catholic schools should have the right to teach intercessionist prayers like the "Hail, Mary" or other prayers to saints asking them them to intercede with God, since it is the belief of Roman Catholics that saints have the power to do that. This is so because, as an American, I believe in freedom of religion...and freedom from religion as well. I am against prayer in public places. I am against the display of crosses on public grounds.
A local firehouse in an Italian part of our town always had a cross in lights at Christmas. It always irked me. Finally there was protest and the cross was taken down. The neighbors were incensed and, in protest, put crosses up everywhere in the neighborhood all over their lawns. It was as if they were saying, "Take that, you heathens! We'll show you! We'll give you crosses! You can't take our cross away from us!"
And the crosses made me happy.
They were where-in my opinion-they belonged.
People have a right to celebrate their religion. They have a right to be free to have crosses and not to be disturbed in the celebration of their faith. Not to be intimidated or mocked or slighted.
But they do not have the right to push their religion on others...i.e.to put them into a shared (public) area.
That's just my first thought on things. Please respond!!!
Deb/AGBF
