Moderator: William Thornton
Gene Scarborough wrote:I think we have a fair and balanced group of Moderators well able to note excess.
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I think it is reasonable and reasonably enforced only when extremes creep in. We can disagree without being disagreeable. Neither do we need such "pretended sweetness" that we can't back up differences with facts. From the beginning of the Christian faith, even the Disciples became disagreeable at times and Jesus corrected them with love and example.
Re: Global Warming Thread XV
New post by Gene Scarborough » 11 Aug 2011, 14:19
David---
,
The following is a true, sincere, question. Wade Burleson wrote:Gentlemen and Gentlewomen,
The following is a true, sincere, question.
"Why do Baptists, who were so emphatic on "separation of church and state" in the 1700's, receive with either welcome arms or stony face silence radical Muslims becoming U.S. citizens and/or government leaders, Muslims who desire to place their hand on the Koran when swearing an oath, Muslims who by the very nature of their Islamic faith CANNOT separate their belief system from their desire to dominate the state and American culture--not to mention the world and world culture--with Islamic law and principles?"
In my opinion, all Baptists, liberal and convservative, should shout from the rooftops the danger we are seeing in this world of secular states becoming radical Muslim states (i.e. Turkey).
Wade Burleson wrote:"Why do Baptists, who were so emphatic on "separation of church and state" in the 1700's, receive with either welcome arms or stony face silence radical Muslims becoming U.S. citizens and/or government leaders, Muslims who desire to place their hand on the Koran when swearing an oath, Muslims who by the very nature of their Islamic faith CANNOT separate their belief system from their desire to dominate the state and American culture--not to mention the world and world culture--with Islamic law and principles?"
Wade Burleson wrote:"Why do Baptists, who were so emphatic on "separation of church and state" in the 1700's, receive with either welcome arms or stony face silence radical Muslims becoming U.S. citizens and/or government leaders, Muslims who desire to place their hand on the Koran when swearing an oath, Muslims who by the very nature of their Islamic faith CANNOT separate their belief system from their desire to dominate the state and American culture--not to mention the world and world culture--with Islamic law and principles?"
In my opinion, all Baptists, liberal and convservative, should shout from the rooftops the danger we are seeing in this world of secular states becoming radical Muslim states (i.e. Turkey).

Ed Pettibone wrote:Ed: So Neil are you going to start editing every thing on these boards that is opinion rather than being fact or at least supported by fact and who is is the final arbitrator of FACT. To do so would make this a very different site than it has ever been.
Exactly what is Jim's "attitude" that you find so out of line. If in fact it is his belief that Islam is a false religion is wrong, why do we support missionaries to Muslim territories, whose primary assignment is to preach Jesus as the one and only savior of the world. And is not denying him the privileged of expressing his opinion a form of censorship? I and maybe you, do not believe that the typical Muslim is as "anti infidel" as Jim does but I do believe there are in fact those who use their religion to support and cover terrorist activity. The sticky wicket is how do we know which are which?
Wade Burleson wrote:
"Why do Baptists, who were so emphatic on "separation of church and state" in the 1700's, receive with either welcome arms or stony face silence radical Muslims becoming U.S. citizens and/or government leaders, Muslims who desire to place their hand on the Koran when swearing an oath, Muslims who by the very nature of their Islamic faith CANNOT separate their belief system from their desire to dominate the state and American culture--not to mention the world and world culture--with Islamic law and principles?"
In my opinion, all Baptists, liberal and convservative, should shout from the rooftops the danger we are seeing in this world of secular states becoming radical Muslim states (i.e. Turkey).
Dave Roberts wrote:Wade Burleson wrote:Gentlemen and Gentlewomen,
The following is a true, sincere, question.
"Why do Baptists, who were so emphatic on "separation of church and state" in the 1700's, receive with either welcome arms or stony face silence radical Muslims becoming U.S. citizens and/or government leaders, Muslims who desire to place their hand on the Koran when swearing an oath, Muslims who by the very nature of their Islamic faith CANNOT separate their belief system from their desire to dominate the state and American culture--not to mention the world and world culture--with Islamic law and principles?"
Your question, Wade, deserves a lot of carefully wrought dialogue.

Big Daddy Weaver wrote:
The presence of church-state separation loving Muslims who don't wish to impose their culture or their faith on American society proves your assumption is a false one and the "nature of Islam" is extremely complex especially when viewed from a historical perspective (same can be said about the "nature" and definition of Christianity).

Wade Burleson wrote:What I can't figure out is why true Baptists, who above ALL PEOPLE, wish for there to always be a separation of church/state, do not speak out LOUDLY AND BOLDLY against the normal, typical Muslim belief that the STATE IS THE CHURCH (using "church" the way we would in our vernacular as Christians) and THE CHURCH IS THE STATE (i.e. Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Mauritania, Oman, Iran and a host of other governments that are exporting THEOCRATIC philsophy throughout the world).
I believe we are called by Christ to love all people, including our enemeis. But I also believe that we should not stand by and allow our ideological enemies (Muslims) to change American culture, government and freedom.
Neil Heath wrote:Ed Pettibone wrote:Ed: To Neil H. and and Dave R.: While I can agree that Jim C. has a tendency to over state his case regarding Muslims, Keep in mind that Jim and I have disagreed regarding the proposed Mosque in the vicinity of the former WTC. I would much rather see one or the other, or both of you engage him in an attempt to change his biased opinion rather than to issue such heavy handed warning against expressing his opinion as appears above in this thread. Choosing not to engage him in discussion for what ever reason, I believe it would suffice to simply insert a highlighted statement, saying, The opinions stated here by Mr. Clark do not reflect the thought and positions of the the moderating staff of this site.
I honestly think Jim's "rant" has being singled out unfairly it light of other stuff that slides by.
I shall reply to Ed, since he seems open to a response.
Jim does indeed dramatically, vehemently overstate his case. I see no need to engage someone who has demonstrated repeatedly that he has no intention of changing his mind (see his response to me). I note that he quoted the forum rule most applicable to his behavior and saw no problem with his post.
[And Ed, if we inserted your suggested sentence each time it was true, it would show up an awful lot, would it not? Rather, I would submit that the truth of that is quite evident without our saying so.]
My concern was partially what he said, which I still say is mostly opinion, not fact. I was also concerned, and have been for some time, about the way he says what he says. It is hostile, mean-spirited and doesn't invite any response or dialogue. A person with his gift for words could express himself so much better and engage us in dialogue instead of diatribes.
I think he comes awfully close to a line that has caused us to ban several people in past years. In the other cases, it was their attitudes and refusal to listen to any suggestion that they tone it down, etc. that got them the boot. I did not threaten to ban Jim, but I did suggest that I might delete similar posts in the future.
I'm sure the mods will end up discussing this privately before it's all over. If I'm out of line, they'll certainly let me know.
Sandy wrote:The Republicans... the best way for them to do that would be to offer a candidate who has the brains and ideas to put up a reasonable opposition, but they seem to be going in another direction...most of whom don't stand a snowball's chance on a hot stove.
Haruo wrote:In the America I came from, the Lone Ranger was a good guy, heck, even Zorro was a hero (though I'm not sure what his immigration status was).
Alan Carter wrote: What else is there to do in Crawford, Texas?
In 1805, Thomas Jefferson hosted what some consider the first iftar at the White House.
“Ramadan,” said President Obama at a White House iftar dinner in 2010, “is a reminder that Islam has always been a part of America. The first Muslim ambassador to the United States, from Tunisia, was hosted by President Jefferson, who arranged a sunset dinner for his guest because it was Ramadan — making it the first known iftar at the White House, more than 200 years ago.”
The dinner to which the president referred took place on December 9, 1805, and Jefferson’s guest was Sidi Soliman Mellimelli, an envoy from the bey (chieftain) of Tunis who spent six months in Washington. The context of Mellimelli’s visit to the United States was a tense dispute over piracy on American merchant vessels by the Barbary states and the capture of Tunisian vessels trying to run an American blockade of Tripoli.
Mellimelli arrived during Ramadan, and Jefferson, when he invited the envoy to the president’s house, changed the meal time from the usual hour of 3:30 p.m. to “precisely at sunset” in deference to the man’s religious obligation.
Jefferson’s knowledge of Islam likely came from his legal studies of natural law. In 1765, Jefferson purchased a two-volume English translation of the Quran for his personal library, a collection that became, in 1815, the basis of the modern Library of Congress.
(This is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/iipdigi ... index.html)
Mrs Haruo wrote:If Jefferson were a woman, he would have been a more thickly veiled democrat.

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