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PostPosted: 05/03/21 9:35 pm • # 176 
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“If I didn’t say I was going to bring the ‘wrath of God’… everyone keeps their head down and keeps on going,” he claimed.

Sounds more like they are ignoring the special gentleman.


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PostPosted: 05/11/21 6:01 am • # 177 
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Just a question. Is there anything that doesn't offend "Christians" anymore? This from 2017:

A Statue of Clarence Darrow Outside the Scopes Monkey Trial Courthouse is Angering Some Christians


https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/201 ... hristians/


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PostPosted: 06/11/21 10:14 am • # 178 
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Newsmax Panel Flips Out After Student Says "Under Allah" in Pledge at Graduation

https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/202 ... raduation/

You can hear it here - the comments are "disappointing"



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PostPosted: 06/11/21 3:53 pm • # 179 
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#178 is hilarious.


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PostPosted: 06/14/21 9:24 am • # 180 
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This is brilliant ....

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PostPosted: 06/23/21 10:48 am • # 181 
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Anglican School Taught Boys to Rank Girls Based on Virginity and Faith

https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/202 ... and-faith/


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PostPosted: 06/23/21 10:44 pm • # 182 
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So the girls were taught the Satan provides opportunities for fleeting sexual encounters. Did they ask when, where and how .....just to be safe you understand.


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PostPosted: 06/24/21 3:38 am • # 183 
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I'm sure the boys asked ... after all, they'd want to know so they could be sure to be there


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PostPosted: 06/24/21 10:01 pm • # 184 
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But not in class. They weren't taught the good stuff. They had to rely on the girls to tell them.


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PostPosted: 06/26/21 7:21 am • # 185 
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White American Christianity Needs to Be Honest About Its History of White Supremacy
CAREY WALLACE

In the past few days, I’ve seen all kinds of statements from Christian leaders trying to distance themselves from the violent mob at the Capitol. Christian writers known for their thoughtfulness lament that “somehow” white supremacy has crept into our churches, and the faculty of a major evangelical institution put out a manifesto saying that the events at the Capitol “bear absolutely no resemblance to” the Christianity they teach. That mob, they’re telling us, is a fringe element. They’ve radically misunderstood the real message of American Christianity.

This could not be further from the truth.

I believe the mob at the Capitol has radically misunderstood the teachings and life of Jesus. But it is an absolutely logical conclusion of white American Christianity.

Hundreds of years ago, the Church laid the foundation for the theft of the Americas, enslavement of Africans and Native Americans, and centuries of brutal colonization worldwide, with the doctrine that it was O.K. to take land and liberty from people who were not Christian.

Within their first decade on this continent, the holiness movement of the Puritans, who told themselves they’d come to the “new world” to spread the gospel, had virtually exterminated the Pequot people, and enslaved many survivors. And Roger Williams, the Massachusetts minister who became the first advocate for religious freedom and the separation of church and state, was banished from his colony by his fellow Christians for objecting to ...

https://time.com/5929478/christianity-white-supremacy/


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PostPosted: 06/29/21 5:10 am • # 186 
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A lot more than Jum Bakker ....

Televangelist Jim Bakker Ordered to Refund Orders of His COVID "Cure"
It's about time he paid a price for his lies.

Tracey deBorja and Hemant Mehta

https://friendlyatheist.substack.com/p/ ... er-ordered

Numerous sound bites and vids at source


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PostPosted: 07/02/21 5:37 am • # 187 
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PostPosted: 07/02/21 9:44 am • # 188 
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Judge Dismisses Creationist's $536,041,100 Lawsuit, Calling It "Delusional"

https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/202 ... elusional/


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PostPosted: 07/06/21 3:47 am • # 189 
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Hobby Lobby advocates for a Christian-run government in Independence Day ads placed in many national newspapers
Sarah Al-Arshani

Hobby Lobby ran a full-page ad in multiple US newspapers on Independence Day.

The advertisement called for a Christian-run government.

It featured quotes from historical figures about Christianity.


On Independence Day, Hobby Lobby ran an advertisement in many newspapers across the country that advocated for a Christian-run government.

The ad, under the title "One Nation Under God," included the biblical verse: "Blessed is the Nation whose God is the lord."

Images of the advertisement were published on ...

https://www.businessinsider.com/hobby-l ... ads-2021-7


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PostPosted: 07/06/21 8:48 am • # 190 
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But which god(s)?
I'd consider Bacchus as one of them.


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PostPosted: 07/08/21 11:56 pm • # 191 
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It's always good when the super rich waste their money.


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PostPosted: 07/09/21 11:38 am • # 192 
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He's at it again....

Noah’s ark theme park in Kentucky to build ‘Tower of Babel’
Ark Encounter says the planned attraction, which will take 3 years to complete, will ‘tackle the racism issue’

By AP

Bible-themed attraction in Kentucky that features a 510-foot-long (155-meter-long) wooden Noah’s ark is planning to begin fundraising for an expansion.

The Ark Encounter said Wednesday that it would take about three years to research, plan and build a “Tower of Babel” attraction on the park’s grounds in northern Kentucky.

A release from the Ark Encounter park said the new attraction will “tackle the racism issue” by helping visitors “understand how genetics research and the Bible confirm the origin of all people groups around the world.” No other details were given on the Babel attraction or what it might look like.

Answers in Genesis, the ministry behind the ark, raised private funds to construct and open the massive wooden attraction in 2016. The group preaches a strict interpretation of the Earth’s creation in the Bible. The group also founded The Creation Museum, which asserts that dinosaurs walked the earth just a few thousand years ago, millions of years after scientists say they went extinct. That facility is just south of Cincinnati in Boone County, Kentucky.

The Ark Encounter’s expansion plans also include an ...

https://www.timesofisrael.com/noahs-ark ... -of-babel/


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PostPosted: 07/09/21 2:21 pm • # 193 
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The Christian Right Is in Decline, and It’s Taking America With It
MICHELLE GOLDBERG

Image


The presidency of George W. Bush may have been the high point of the modern Christian right’s influence in America. White evangelicals were the largest religious faction in the country. “They had a president who claimed to be one of their own, he had a testimony, talked in evangelical terms,” said Robert P. Jones, chief executive of the Public Religion Research Institute and author of the 2016 book “The End of White Christian America.”

Back then, much of the public sided with the religious right on the key culture war issue of gay marriage. “In 2004, if you had said, ‘We’re the majority, we oppose gay rights, we oppose marriage equality, and the majority of Americans is with us,’ that would have been true,” Jones told me. Youthful megachurches were thriving. It was common for conservatives to gloat that they were going to outbreed the left.

Activists imagined a glorious future. “Home-schoolers will be inordinately represented in the highest levels of leadership and power in the next generation,” Ned Ryun, a former Bush speechwriter, said at a 2005 Christian home-schooling convention. Ryun was the director of a group called Generation Joshua, which worked to get home-schooled kids into politics. The name came from the Old Testament. Moses had led the chosen people out of exile, but it was his successor, Joshua, who conquered the Holy Land.

But the evangelicals who thought they were about to take over America were destined for disappointment. On Thursday, P.R.R.I. released startling new polling data showing just how much ground the religious right has lost. P.R.R.I.’s 2020 Census of American Religion, based on a survey of nearly half a million people, shows a precipitous decline in the share of the population identifying as white evangelical, from 23 percent in 2006 to 14.5 percent last year. (As a category, “white evangelicals” isn’t a perfect proxy for the religious right, but the overlap is substantial.) In 2020, as in every year since 2013, the largest religious group in the United States was the religiously unaffiliated.

One of P.R.R.I.’s most surprising findings was that in 2020, there were more white mainline Protestants than white evangelicals. This doesn’t necessarily mean Christians are joining mainline congregations — the survey measures self-identification, not church affiliation. It is, nevertheless, a striking turnabout after years when mainline Protestantism was considered moribund and evangelical Christianity full of dynamism.

In addition to shrinking as a share of the population, white evangelicals were also the oldest religious group in the United States, with a median age of 56. “It’s not just that they are dying off, but it is that they’re losing younger members,” Jones told me. As the group has become older and smaller, Jones said, “a real visceral sense of loss of cultural dominance” has set in.

White evangelicals once saw themselves “as the owners of mainstream American culture and morality and values,” said Jones. Now they are just another subculture.

From this fact derives much of our country’s cultural conflict. It helps explain not just the rise of Donald Trump, but also the growth of QAnon and even the escalating conflagration over critical race theory. “It’s hard to overstate the strength of this feeling, among white evangelicals in particular, of America being a white Christian country,” said Jones. “This sense of ownership of America just runs so deep in white evangelical circles.” The feeling that it’s slipping away has created an atmosphere of rage, resentment and paranoia.

QAnon is essentially a millenarian movement, with Trump taking the place of Jesus. Adherents dream of the coming of what they call the storm, when the enemies of the MAGA movement will be rounded up and executed, and Trump restored to his rightful place of leadership.

“It’s not unlike a belief in the second coming of Christ,” said Jones. “That at some point God will reorder society and set things right. I think that when a community feels itself in crisis, it does become more susceptible to conspiracy theories and other things that tell them that what they’re experiencing is not ultimately what’s going to happen.”

The fight over critical race theory seems, on the surface, further from theological concerns. There are, obviously, plenty of people who aren’t evangelical who are anti-C.R.T., as well as evangelicals who oppose C.R.T. bans. But the idea that public schools are corrupting children by leading them away from a providential understanding of American history has deep roots in white evangelical culture. And it was the Christian right that pioneered the tactic of trying to take over school boards in response to teachings seen as morally objectionable, whether that meant sex education, “secular humanism” or evolution.

Jones points out that last year, after Trump issued an executive order targeting critical race theory, the presidents of all six seminaries of the Southern Baptist Convention came together to declare C.R.T. “incompatible” with the Baptist faith. Jones, whose latest book is “White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity,” could recall no precedent for such a joint statement.

As Jones notes, the Southern Baptist Convention was formed in 1845 after splitting with abolitionist Northern Baptists. He described it as a “remarkable arc”: a denomination founded on the defense of slavery “denouncing a critical read of history that might put a spotlight on that story.”

Then again, white evangelicals probably aren’t wrong to fear that their children are getting away from them. As their numbers have shrunk and as they’ve grown more at odds with younger Americans, said Jones, “that has led to this bigger sense of being under attack, a kind of visceral defensive posture, that we saw President Trump really leveraging.”

I was frightened by the religious right in its triumphant phase. But it turns out that the movement is just as dangerous in decline. Maybe more so. It didn’t take long for the cocky optimism of Generation Joshua to give way to the nihilism of the Jan. 6 insurrectionists. If they can’t own the country, they’re ready to defile it.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/09/opin ... erica.html


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PostPosted: 07/11/21 6:39 am • # 194 
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The amazing (amusing?) thing here is that the "snowflakes" going "PC' are conservative right wing evangelicals.
Aren't they supposed to believe in the literal word of the bible?


When evangelical snowflakes censor the Bible: The English Standard Version goes PC
How a Bible edition aimed at right-wing evangelicals has quietly scrubbed references to slavery and "the Jews"

By PAUL ROSENBERG

ong before Donald Trump made attacks against "political correctness" a key theme of his 2016 election campaign, evangelical leaders like Wayne Grudem, author of "Systematic Theology", have railed against it, particularly when they see it invading their turf — with gender-neutral language in Bible translations, for instance. But a new study by Samuel Perry, co-author of "Taking America Back for God" (I've previously interviewed his co-author, sociologist Andrew Whitehead), finds Grudem himself involved in much the same thing.

"Whitewashing Evangelical Scripture: The Case of Slavery and Antisemitism in the English Standard Version," looks at how successive translations have changed in the English Standard Version of the Bible, for which Grudem serves on the oversight committee.

In revisions from 2001 through 2016, Perry shows, the word "slave" first gains a footnote, then moves to the footnote and then disappears entirely — in some contexts, like Colossians 3:22, though not others — to be replaced by the word "bondservant," which could be described as a politically correct euphemism. A similar strategy is used to handle antisemitic language as well, Perry shows.

It's one thing for politicians to hypocritically switch positions mid-air, or hold contradictory positions simultaneously, but it's quite another thing for theologians — or at least it's supposed to be. Evangelical Christians in particular are supposed to revere the literal truth of the Bible, not fiddle around with it to make it sound better to contemporary audiences. So Perry's findings deserve much wider attention, which is why Salon reached out to discuss what he discovered and ...

https://www.salon.com/2021/07/10/when-e ... n-goes-pc/


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PostPosted: 07/14/21 4:30 am • # 195 
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Christianity is Collapsing

https://www.patheos.com/blogs/daylighta ... ollapsing/

Quote:
White evangelicals who dominate the Republican Party - electing Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, and Donald Trump - have shrunk to a mere 14% of the population. Their power to sway elections may fade even further.


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PostPosted: 07/17/21 1:45 am • # 196 
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The problem with that supposition is that Trump got 44.6% of the vote. That's somewhat more than 14%.


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PostPosted: 07/17/21 7:16 am • # 197 
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The stupid ... it burns

Creationist: The Fight to Save Endangered Species Proves Evolution is a Lie


https://friendlyatheist.patheos.com/202 ... -is-a-lie/


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PostPosted: 07/17/21 8:42 am • # 198 
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"Creationism" would indicate that some evolve more slowly than others.


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PostPosted: 07/17/21 9:09 am • # 199 
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oskar576 wrote:
"Creationism" would indicate that some evolve more slowly than others.

In this case, evolution actually starts at the top left and advances to the bottom right

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PostPosted: 07/17/21 9:20 am • # 200 
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Crap. I thought that was just getting old.


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