Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: glutenberg
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: glutenberg
As is always the case, the author doesn't always have full authority over what is written.
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And exactly how is this is opposition to anything that I have posted in this thread thus far? It seems that you think you have proven me wrong by proving me right.
How have I proven you right? You said the DoI makes no mention of the Christian God. I then provided you a link to show that the original DoI didn't mention the Christian God but other members of the committee added those words into the DoI. All you've proven is that Jefferson was against the indoctrination of God in the founding documents not that the founding documents are not laced with religious undertones.
I'm sorry for you that you've been brainwashed into reading historical documents from a strictly modern perspecitive.
However, I'll try this one more time, with clear language and elaboration.
- The DoI makes no mention of the Christian God.
- The DoI was, from the perspective of the ruling religions of the time, as blasphemous and heretical as any document possibly could be.
- Words like "Nature," "Nature's God," "Creator," and "Divine Providence," as used in the context of the DoI, are all Deist in origin.
- Deism is in no way connected to the Christian religions.
- Deism, Theism, Agnositicism, Atheism, Gnosticism, Buddhism, etc. are all not even actual religions per se, but system of belief that may (or may not) incorporate religious ideologies.
- Organized religions are institutions of authority that are traditionally established around systems of belief that incorporate religious ideologies.
- The King of England derived his power to rule from the religious authority of "Divine Right" granted him from the Anglican Church.
- The Founding Fathers were thumbing their noses not just to the King, but the Anglican Church that granted the King his authority as well.
- The phrase "In God We Trust" does not in any way date back to this country's founding or the Founding Fathers.
- I think the Indiana "In God We Trust" plate shouldn't just have a matching fee, but (ideally) should be done away with.
- I think that "In God We Trust" should not even be on our money.
- I think the people trying to argue on behalf of those last 2 would be far more successful if they would educate themselves better in history and less in modern internet-derived teenage-angst-based pseudo-atheistic nonsense.
edit to your edit:
Originally posted by: glutenberg
Edit:
So, what's the point of saying that the newly founded country is protected by Divine Providence if there aren't any religious undertones? You think they merely added that in so that the King of England would understand that God is now protecting the US instead of his Divine Right?
No... they were telling the king that God (whatever god that may be) had revoked his right to rule and given it to the people (where it had, in fact, resided all along anyway), along with a very long list of reasons why.