Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Christian Persecution in America


The dark pessimism of American Christians


A review of Mary Eberstadt's book It's Dangerous to Believe: Religious Freedom and Its Enemies 

By Michael Brendan Dougherty

The following is an excerpt:

Eberstadt documents in exhaustive detail this widespread social urge to rob Christians of their livelihoods and their good names, merely for believing what their churches have always taught, and acting on those beliefs. This is not just a handful of bakers who refused to make gay wedding cakes. There was the U.S. Marine Monica Sterling, who was given a dishonorable discharge for posting the Biblical verse "No weapon shall prosper against me" on her own computer, which a military judge said "could be interpreted as combative." Or the mayor of Houston, who demanded that pastors turn over their sermons to her for inspection. Religious colleges are faced with challenges to their accreditation. Charity groups and adoption agencies are subjected to continual and costly campaigns of legal assault for acting in accordance with the tenets of their religion. Even in the last few weeks since Eberstadt's book has been published, Catholic hospitals, which service some of the poorest areas in the country, are being portrayed as an alien and malignant force as the ACLU sues them for not performing abortions.
Eberstadt, in a neat series of chapters, contrasts the self-descriptions of progressives and secularists with their actions. They believe themselves champions of civil rights, while circumscribing the freedoms of fellow citizens. They imagine themselves tolerant, while prosecuting their cultural enemies with the zeal of inquisitors. They make blacklists and call themselves open-minded.

And ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake: but he that endureth to the end shall be saved. Matthew 10:22

4 comments:

Loretta said...

"This is not just a handful of bakers who refused to make gay wedding cakes."

Exactly.

Good article, and so true.

C.H. Truth said...

A one issue society in so many ways. In the eyes of many, religion represent pro-life and traditional marriage... and therefore evil. Sometimes reasonable people can disagree. What makes that disagreement a problem is when unreasonable people disagree.

Commonsense said...

Unreasonable people are not even the problem. It's when unreasonable people obtain the levers of power and enforce their will on everybody else that it becomes a problem.

C.H. Truth said...

Agreed. Like the sidebar fix and addition.