Originally Posted by 
CTDQuestions:
1. Who's advocating any national religion for the U.S.?
 
2. What religion are they trying to establish?
 
3. Who will appoint the leaders of the official church?
 
4. What was the official religion of the U.S. 100 years ago?
 
Anyone care to answer?
Here's your four answers.
 
1.) Many Christians generally of the Evangelical branch and of the Republican party advocate for a theocracy. (See any of the posts of Clirus or the Wall Builders web site.) They generally claim that Christianity is already the national religion and should be accorded more priviledges, while tolerance for other beleifs should be limited. Ironically the same groups and people often claim to be persecuted for their beleifs.
		
 
		
	 
Factually incorrect. Really now, anyone can just make stuff up - it's not impressive. There are not many Christians at all trying to establish a theocracy - I defy anyone to go find so many as five by tomorrow.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			2.) They are usually trying to establish a non-denominational branch of protestant evangelical Christianity or pentecostal protestant evangelical Christianity as the favored church, but are often big enough to grant room to other families of Christianity and sometimes Jews. They are also generally clear that other religions, agnostics and anyone who prefers a secular society with freedom of religion should not be so blessed.  I'm quite sure you can observe these folks by watching Fox news, listening to talk radio, visiting the Wall Builders web site or dropping by many churches.
		
		
	 
This or that ... you imagine. So what? If they were for real, there'd be no this or that. If they really existed, they'd have proposals and plans drawn up. Nobody'd have to try imagining.
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			3.) Frightening question, huh? God forbid that said church should be led by a televangelist, Fox news commentator or such, but they are often the ones most likely to rail against freedom of religion and the wall of separation.
		
		
	 
Again, if such a group existed, the question would be easily answered. We should have no need of vague blah-de-blah nonsense.
The question is very simple, and direct. It rates a simple and direct answer.
"3. Who will appoint the leaders of the official church?"
 
There now. If such people exist in numbers, and are organized and planning all this, why can you not answer the question?
	
		
	
	
		
		
			4.) 100 years ago, as today, there was no official religion in America, but...
		
		
	 
Not interested in more yakkity-yak. 100 years ago, the Bible was universally employed as a textbook, and there was nobody indoctrinating students with evolutionism. Nobody was passing out condoms or instructing teens to be immoral. America was a God-fearing country, and by your own admission there was no official religion.
If anyone suggests we return so much as one step in the direction of right, scoffers howl that to do so would violate the "separation of church and state". They lie. Church and state have been separate all along.
No hostility toward faith was ever intended. Atheistic indoctrination is not constitutionally required. It never has been, and it cannot be compatible with freedom.
I invite all patriots to reflect on this profound question:
"And can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are of the gift of God? That they are not to be violated but with his wrath?" - Thomas Jefferson