Sure, but -- forgive me -- yours is one opinion among hundred millions in this country. And there’s no-one carrying water for you in Congress or the WH, where the current incumbent is particularly devout and very public about it.
Christians’ rewards are in the afterlife. We’re not supposed to care about popularity contests in the temporal…
Sure, but -- forgive me -- yours is one opinion among hundred millions in this country. And there’s no-one carrying water for you in Congress or the WH, where the current incumbent is particularly devout and very public about it.
Christians’ rewards are in the afterlife. We’re not supposed to care about popularity contests in the temporal world. But if indeed the popularity contests matter, then maybe Evangelicals like Dr Moore need to evaluate why people are turning away from their rigid, sexist, misogynistic, at-times-hateful beliefs that split families. The answer probably isn’t “be more biblical.”
Yes, what you describe is reminiscent of many minority perspectives that are nonetheless governing our public life. Most people want gun control, more reproductive rights, national basic healthcare, help with childcare expenses, help with elder care, etc. Regardless of popular support, it’s clear we will never have those things. Religion likewise has an invisible cloak of impunity and immunity from scrutiny regarding their public influence; politics from the pulpit is supposed to be taboo under our tax laws, but it goes on with obvious awareness of impunity.
Sure, but -- forgive me -- yours is one opinion among hundred millions in this country. And there’s no-one carrying water for you in Congress or the WH, where the current incumbent is particularly devout and very public about it.
Christians’ rewards are in the afterlife. We’re not supposed to care about popularity contests in the temporal world. But if indeed the popularity contests matter, then maybe Evangelicals like Dr Moore need to evaluate why people are turning away from their rigid, sexist, misogynistic, at-times-hateful beliefs that split families. The answer probably isn’t “be more biblical.”
Yes, what you describe is reminiscent of many minority perspectives that are nonetheless governing our public life. Most people want gun control, more reproductive rights, national basic healthcare, help with childcare expenses, help with elder care, etc. Regardless of popular support, it’s clear we will never have those things. Religion likewise has an invisible cloak of impunity and immunity from scrutiny regarding their public influence; politics from the pulpit is supposed to be taboo under our tax laws, but it goes on with obvious awareness of impunity.