[IP] religion eof
------- Original message -------
From: Amos Jessup <amos@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 10/4/'05, 8:36
Some religionists, feeling one way or feeling another, are unwilling to keep their religions private. The commons of civic discourse may be fed by feelings but
in the final analysis, it is best served by reason, and our Constitutional tradition is that that reason is bounded in its concerns to the secular-including th
e emotional, unavoidably, but placing religion behind a Jeffersonian “wall of separation”.
There is reason for doing this which is both good and sufficient, since it is demonstrable that differing religious views are irreconcilable in their basic natu
re, and cannot be particularly tested. It is also historically true that the glib and irrational use of religious icons and notions to justify irrational cours
es of action is a peculiarly human pox.
Studying that religion exists, and what it does or does not say in a comparative framework is innocuous enough on the face of it and your friend is right that C
hristmas deserves as much analysis as Kwanzaa or Ramadan. But whether one or another adherent of any given religion feels his non-secular, religious beliefs ar
e given sufficient honor by those who do not share them is pretty irrelevant under the doctrine of separation. He/she may find solace in congregation, or medit
ation, or prayer in a private moment. Not in debate on the commons.
Amos Jessup
-- UNIVERSE
Sometimes I think we're alone.
Sometimes I think we're not.
In either case,
the thought is staggering.
R. Buckminster Fuller
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