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I was attempting to show that the popular depiction of the ten commandments is indeed an iconic image, recognizable even when it is small enough for the words to be illegible. If the words are more important than the icon, you could just as easily engrave them on an obelisk, or emboss them on hide.
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You are mixing the definition of icon in the artistic sense with the definition in a religious sense. Purposefully, I think. |
Well, I'm not going to argue scripture. I was just noting that there most certainly was such thing as an image of the ten commandments separate from the word content, and recognizable even when the "words" are nothing more than a wiggly line per commandment.
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And what then, do you make of the repeated inclusion of the idea of a creator in nearly all of the big US documents and coins?
If they really wanted complete and utter separation of religion and government, why put it in all those documents? The pledge? The coins? |
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That's great, what about the rest of it?
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The rest of it goes out of its way to avoid Christian terms.
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It is certain that the Judeo-Christian ethic has affected western civilisation in many ways. Certainly it has affected the set of laws we now have.
On the other hand, "When religion and politics ride in the same cart...". (Dang can't remember the rest of the quote. Herbert or Heinlein, I think.) I'm Catholic. How about we put a statue of Mary in the state capitols? See the kind of trouble this can lead to? I'd rather keep religion and politics separate. One more 'however'. I do vote based on my morality. |
The pledge and coins are irrelevant. The founding document of the country and the document that determines how things operate is the Constitution. The establishment clause tells us that it has no official religion. The words of Jefferson and Washington on the matter are clear. Here's what Washington wrote, just after the Constitution was accepted, to a bunch of Jews in RI who were worried about the nature of the new country, that it may shut them out like they had been before:
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The pledge was written without any referrence to God by a PREACHER in 1892. See a previous post with the writer's words. Again. Here is a greenback, the first national currency, I'm still looking for the word "God". http://www.frbsf.org/currency/indust...rst/c185fr.jpg http://www.frbsf.org/currency/indust...rst/c185bk.jpg |
see, i told you other people who know their shit better than me would chime in
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