About David Gideon
We're All Gonna Die!
Enough about Change!
Fie on Consensus!
Another Bailout?
No on 2!
No to Obama
Palin's Grandchild
Our Environment
Public Money?
Legislating Morality
TMNT and Morals
Al Gore
Not a Family Guy
Liberals are haters
Capitalism Rules!
Black Friday
Romney and religion
Whither McCain?
Vote for Ron Paul
Hold up, now, Ron.
Reject Ron Paul
Quit, Kwame!
Respect Obama
John vs. Barack
Bor-ing.
North to Alaska
David's reads
The Right Links
e-mail me

Mitt Romney and religious principles.
  Mitt Romney, one of many Republican candidates for President, recently spoke out on the subject of religion and politics. I gathered that his overriding point was that without a Deity of some sort we cannot truly comprehend the moral needs of civil society. If that is what he meant, I have to agree with him. Everyone either believes in something beyond himself or they do not. The Jew, the Christian, the Muslim, and so on, believe in a Deity which instructs them on behavior. The secularist, I presume, does not. On what, then, does the secularist base his creed? His own affirmation? Well, why should I, as a human being who is a moral equal to him, accept that as a basis for human development? It’s simply circular. Without a Deity above it all, where do we appeal for affirmation (or, to be true, negation) of what we think should be done with, not only our laws, but our own direct dealings with those around us? That said, the seriously religious need to understand that they cannot make people without faith have faith. If it is coerced, it is of course without value. Yet that does not mean that our faith cannot enlighten even our public will. The trick is to know where to stop: I, as a Catholic, cannot legislate to make you believe the Eucharist is the Body of Christ, as that is wholly a tenet of faith. But on issues which involve more than faith, and I will use abortion as an example not to inflame but as it’s an easy and obvious political issue with moral implications, I can legislate, for it does not require faith alone to see a human life as a human life requiring government protection. Is there, then, a religious aspect to my politics? Of course. But that does not make my politics wrong. The secular world needs to understand that distinction if it is to understand us at all. The real question is, does it want to? If not, then I may fairly ask who's the one being unilateral and non-inclusive in our political arena. Is it us on the right, or those whose religion is themselves?

 



|About David Gideon| |We're All Gonna Die!| |Enough about Change!| |Fie on Consensus!| |Another Bailout?| |No on 2!| |No to Obama| |Palin's Grandchild| |Our Environment| |Public Money?| |Legislating Morality| |TMNT and Morals| |Al Gore| |Not a Family Guy| |Liberals are haters| |Capitalism Rules!| |Black Friday| |Romney and religion| |Whither McCain?| |Vote for Ron Paul| |Hold up, now, Ron.| |Reject Ron Paul| |Quit, Kwame!| |Respect Obama| |John vs. Barack| |Bor-ing.| |North to Alaska| |David's reads| |The Right Links|