[Vision2020] Why do Jesus-followers want to discriminate?

deb debismith at moscow.com
Sat Nov 22 18:22:06 PST 2014


This was the highlight of my day. Spot on. I love it when someone can say succinctly what I think and feel, and what I hear echoed by those I love (Mormon, Catholic, Protestant, Baptist, Muslim, Pagan, Native American, wiccan, agnostic, and atheist).

Speaking here (by permission) for friends and family:

"None of us want to force anyone into a box with our own label of rightiousness. Yet we are all constantly under attack by those who would make us conform to their version of "holy", and who feel put upon and disenfranchised because we all are not in alignment with them......

It is truly ugly when the EXTREME voices are able to paralyze everyone else. We don't care if you say 
"Merry Christmas", "God Bless", "Goddess Bless", "Happy Hannukah", "Feliz Novidad", "Merry Yule", "Happy Holidays", "Solstice Blessings", or any other holiday greeting. We are just pleased you want the best for us! We just want the best for you as well. Get over yourselves and your control issues. Find a good therapist, change denominations,
 or just get a grip on reality, and render unto the rest of us some flippin' slack!

So if you are narrow minded enough to spoil it for everyone who doesn't see it exactly like you see it, our advice is:

JUST STAY THE HECK HOME AND LET THE REST OF US GET ALONG WITH ENJOYING OUR HOLIDAYS
 WITH NICE PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT SO FLAMING RIGID. STOP SPOILING OUR HOLIDAYS WITH
 YOUR RELIGIOUS INSECURITY." 

Thanks for the rant space---and a Happy Holidays from Thanksgiving thru Imbolc to the Visionaries!  Blessed Be for The Winter Solstice AND Merry Christmas. Wishing each of you well and a Non-Contentious New Year.

Debi Robinson-Smith with Family and Friends
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Hansen 
  To: Moscow Vision 2020 
  Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2014 7:05 AM
  Subject: [Vision2020] Why do Jesus-followers want to discriminate?


  Courtesy of today's (November 22, 2014) Spokesman-Review


  --------------------------------------


  Why do Jesus-followers want to discriminate?
  The Rev. Paul Graves

  For some time, I’ve watched the political skirmishes that pit religious people and/or organizations against cities, counties, states or our country. It’s past time that I publicly ask my question: Why do religious people want the right to discriminate against other people? 

  The issue bubbled to my surface after watching news reports of the owners of The Hitching Post in Coeur d’Alene fight against the city’s human rights ordinance. Because of their religious beliefs, the owners wanted to be able say “no” to same-sex couples wanting to be married.

  So I’ve done some research on the countrywide legal quagmire on the laws that give religious organizations the “right” to discriminate against persons they would rather not serve. The whole issue is very complicated and very legalistic – no surprise there.

  It all seems to begin, at least legally, with the national Civil Rights Act of 1964. Then in 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act became law. Title III of that act exempted “religious corporations, associations, educational institutions or societies” from various forms of discrimination. 

  That exemption effectively gave those religious groups permission to discriminate if they thought it was in their best interest. And there’s the rub for me. (As in columns past, I can only speak out of my own Christian tradition. I have no right to assume anything of other faiths.)

  Simply put: As I read of how Jesus lived, and taught his followers, I see no evidence that discriminating against other persons had any place in his actions or his motives. So why do some of his followers think it is their “right” to discriminate against persons they’ve decided to be unworthy?

  I’m genuinely puzzled about this, folks. I’m not talking about the legal rights currently present in our laws. I’m talking about the basic responsibilities that Jesus-followers have based on our understanding of, to repeat a cliché, What Would Jesus Do?

  As I reflect on my puzzlement, one curiosity I have is this: Why are churches and their members clamoring so hard for “our rights” when Jesus never seemed concerned about his or his followers’ rights? Jesus lived for others, not himself. He urged his followers to do likewise.

  So how are we doing? Inconsistently at best, is my guess. 

  What really is the church’s role in our American society supposed to be? I certainly don’t see our role as establishing a theocracy, a government ruled by someone’s version of God and religion. That isn’t what Jesus sought. Why should we? 

  I assert our faith role is to influence our government to positive movement toward justice for all persons. When we try to force religious views on the country’s population, we can become a dangerous political machine. Again, that isn’t what Jesus sought. Why should we?

  When we work to support just treatment for all persons, we more closely reflect the spirit of Jesus and God than when we cry “foul” and seek special treatment to do what our “lesser self” drives us to do. That isn’t what Jesus sought for any person. Why should we?

  When we manipulate the laws of our cities, counties, states and country to put us in favored position with those political entities, we fall into the trap of being just another political entity. Churches are called to be different than that by God. Too often, we settle for being no different.

  I’m still puzzled by “religious corporations, associations, educational institutions or societies” that are willing to play compromised political games for some illusion of power. Our power isn’t supposed to come from governments. Is it?

  The Rev. Paul Graves, a Sandpoint resident and retired United Methodist minister, is the founder of Elder Advocates. He can be contacted at welhouse at nctv.com.

  --------------------------------------


  Seeya 'round town, Moscow, because . . .


  "Moscow Cares" 
  http://www.MoscowCares.com
    
  Tom Hansen
  Moscow, Idaho



------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  =======================================================
   List services made available by First Step Internet,
   serving the communities of the Palouse since 1994.
                 http://www.fsr.net
            mailto:Vision2020 at moscow.com
  =======================================================


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  No virus found in this message.
  Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
  Version: 2014.0.4794 / Virus Database: 4189/8613 - Release Date: 11/22/14
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.fsr.com/pipermail/vision2020/attachments/20141122/b3f26858/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Vision2020 mailing list