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Catholic adoption agencies have been forced to close their doors in Illinois, Massachusetts and Washington |
By Rep. J. Randy Forbes, Friday, February 8, 2013
FORBES: America’s new government-imposed religion
Catholic
adoption agencies have been forced to close their doors in Illinois,
Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., because their religious beliefs about
marriage were deemed unacceptable by their jurisdictions.
A
graduate student in Michigan was expelled from a counseling program
because her religious beliefs about marriage were deemed unacceptable by
school officials.
Christian pharmacists in Illinois were told to
find other professions because their religious beliefs regarding when
life begins were deemed unacceptable by the state.
Private business
owners are facing enormous fines because their beliefs about when life
begins have been deemed unacceptable by the federal government.
Pastor Louie Giglio
did not deliver the closing prayer at President Obama’s inauguration
ceremony because his religious beliefs about marriage were deemed
unacceptable by the administration.
In January, our nation
celebrated Religious Freedom Day, commemorating the anniversary of the
passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, in which Thomas Jefferson wrote, “Be it enacted by the General Assembly,
that no man shall otherwise suffer on account of his religious opinions
or belief; but that all men shall be free to profess, and by argument to
maintain, their opinion in matters of religion.”
Compared with
others around the world, people of faith in America enjoy extraordinary
freedoms. Our lives are not in danger. We do not face imprisonment or
torture for holding unpopular convictions.
Yet when people of
faith are restricted from fully participating in society — owning
businesses, entering the medical profession or providing much-needed
charitable services — an intolerable trade-off has occurred. The government has exceeded its boundary, and the figurative wall between church and state must be strengthened.
Our
government is powerless without “the consent of the governed.” This
uniquely American design, explicit in the founding document of the United
States, was devised in part to ensure that unless an individual
consents, the government may
not force him to violate the sacred relationship between him and his
God. This freedom of conscience was secured in the First Amendment,
guaranteeing that Americans could exercise their faith without government
interference.
What resulted was an unprecedented melting pot of
thoughts,beliefs and ideas. The success of the American experiment
was evidenced by the immigrants drawn to our shores in search of
this shining beacon of tolerance, this refuge where individuals
could freely live out their convictions without fear of
government retribution.
Thomas Jefferson
recognized the sacrosanct relationship between God and man when he
penned a letter to the Danbury Baptists in 1802, coining the “wall of
separation between Church and State.” The Baptists had written to the
newly elected president expressing concern that religious freedoms were
being treated by the state of Connecticut “as favors granted, and not as
inalienable rights.”
Jefferson’s response
fell wholly on the side of religious freedom: “I contemplate with
sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared
that their legislature should ‘make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’ thus building a
wall of separation between Church and State. Adhering to this expression
of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights of conscience, I
shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of those sentiments
which tend to restore to man all his natural rights, convinced he has no
natural right in opposition to his social duties.”
Two hundred
years later, this important concept has been distorted into a tool used
to sanitize school classrooms, war memorials and courtrooms of references
to faith. Its misapplication has led the public to believe that Jefferson’s intent was to confine religion to the four walls of the church. Context reveals, however, that Jefferson’s wall actually was meant to constrain the government, ensuring religious freedoms are treated as “inalienable rights”rather than “favors granted.”
The
tide has turned, and we have begun to see the emergence of
a state-created orthodoxy. It deems support for traditional
marriage unacceptable. It discredits those who believe that life begins
at conception. It disfavors their faith — held for centuries by
their predecessors — and creates a regulatory framework to prevent
them from fully participating in the public square.
When the government says,
“You can believe whatever you want, but you will be penalized if you
exercise those beliefs,” we have entered dangerous territory. We cannot
allow a religious litmus test to determine who may participate in
American life. We must defend the Constitution not only in form, but also
in effect.
According to the First Amendment of the Constitution, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
ReplyDeleteEach of us has the right under this amendment to practice our religion as we see fit, without the interference of the government.
Progressives and other liberals have taken this statement to mean something different then what was originally intended. We must continue to express, LOUD AND CLEAR, to all that we have freedom OF religion, and not FROM religion,” and this is an unalienable right given to us by God and not the government!