AU Interview with Bruce Prescot
I found
this interesting. A taste:
Q.
You are a Southern Baptist minister who now calls himself a
“post-denominational Christian.” What specifically about your faith led
you to take this case on?
Prescott: I call myself a “post-denominational Christian” because
today differences between denominations are insignificant in comparison
to the divisions between conservative and progressive Christians within
each denomination. In Baptist life only a remnant remain advocates for
separation of religion and government. On this issue, I find that I have
more in common with progressive-minded people of other denominations,
other faiths and people of no faith than I do with most contemporary
Baptists.
Few people today know that
the earliest Baptists were some of the foremost champions of separation
of church and state. Those Baptists championed liberty of conscience,
and by that they meant the universal right to self-determination in
matters of religious belief and worship. They held that decisions
regarding religious life and eternal destiny are intensely personal and
require a conscientious commitment by a mature individual. Convictions
so central to the integrity of personality and character could not be
delegated to others — least of all to the government. In their eyes,
genuine faith could not be coerced or handed down like an heirloom. That
led them to become advocates for religious liberty for everyone —
including pagans, atheists, Jews, Muslims and people of other faiths.
I
share these convictions of the early Baptists. That is why I opposed
placing the Ten Commandments monument at the state capitol in Oklahoma.
In that location, the monument symbolizes a union of church and state
that is detrimental to both. In effect, it serves notice that the
government endorses a certain stream of religion and treats its
adherents preferentially. It gives the appearance that persons of no
faith and people of other faiths are second-class citizens.
1 comment:
Scratch one of these bland "No Labels" types and you'll almost always find an Obama voter. Wake me when one of these great champions of religious liberty fights for the Little Sisters of the Poor.
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