Ignatius the Kiwi
Dissident
- Mar 2, 2013
- 9,065
- 4,768
- Country
- New Zealand
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Eastern Orthodox
- Marital Status
- Single
And what is the law the US operates on? What does it affect and how does it shape society? For instance, you're consistent that you don't care about polygamy because that is consistent with your secular liberal principles, but such a polygamy if it is practiced (and we're seeing it practiced more openly in modern society) can only weaken Christian notions of monogamy.We operate on law like all nations have done. What we as believers hold for morality might be different, in our behavior.
My issue with your perspective, when you essentially outlaw a Christian moral perspective from law is that you invite the dechristianization of society because the laws of a society matter and have a top down affect. My question for you, since you believe in the absolute supremacy of the US constitution as a liberal secular document which must be maintained above all, is how do Christians as a community actually thrive in said system? When said system does everything it can to encourage behavior which is antithetical to Christianity and prevents Christians from forming communities which are allowed to govern themselves?
I notice this common attitude amongst Americans who do not like their government being criticized by non-Americans. As if America was an Island and not a global super power that regularly invades countries, spreads it's culture of decadence and immorality globally and undermines Christianity. Why can't a New Zealander, one who is not particularly nationalist or cares about even his own government, criticize America?A New Zealander lectures an American about the American's system of government, and when the American attempts to politely explained to the New Zealander how things are in the US, gets called condescending for his trouble. Nice.
I can see the same trends in teh USA as I can in the rest of the western world. If you think Christianity is strong in the USA and isn't a fading force due to the secularization you support and the liberal secular interpretation of the constitution then please explain to me how I am wrong. It's not hard to see how law and society in the USA has changed since the founding, one which largely encouraged Christian communities to thrive and act according to their moral laws and how these have been stripped away. Getting rid of prayer in public school for instance, the hostility towards Christianity from elite circles in the USA. Am I imagining these things and Christianity is as strong as it ever was?If you've lived your entire life as other than a US citizen, you may wish to consider than a US citizen may know more about what's going on in his country than someone nearly half a globe away. If you're a US expatriate, then that's a different situation. Yet in the portion quoted above, you cited pandemic restrictions apparently without realizing that these were done on the state, county/parish, and municipal levels rather than the federal. You may wish to consider that there's a reason why this is so. Or not. It's up to you.
Humanity has radically changed and is always in the process of changing, at least culturally and even biologically. It's foolish to think for instance that New Zealanders are the same as they were a hundred years ago, they aren't and the same is true of America. Both societies have seen the decline of Christianity as a public force largely due to the development of enlightenment liberalism which stresses freedom from said force of Christianity.You may also wish to consider that if Americans are so changed that what they were two centuries ago, what of humanity over a period ten times as long? It is also your contention that humanity has radically changed?
Things change and clinging to a piece of paper instead of dealing with the here and now of a political situation will leave you unable to address the reality of a situation.
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