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View Full Version : Are Christians Persecuted? A Replication Poll


TruthSeeker
3rd January 2004, 07:07 PM
This article (http://http://www.beliefnet.com/story/137/story_13788_1.html) presents the background.

We've all read it over at Rapture Ready, too. Christians are being persecuted, apparently.

Partly, this is part of Jesus' prophecy, so in a way, is a good thing.

Anyway, what do you say? Are Christians being persecuted?

c4ts
3rd January 2004, 07:11 PM
Only in Ancient Rome, where Nero is caesar.

Anyway, everybody on Planet X is xian by nature.

Ratman_tf
3rd January 2004, 09:54 PM
With a suitable definition, anyone and everyone can consider themselves persecuted.

I would tend to say No though. At least, they're not as persecuted as ME. ;)

fishbob
3rd January 2004, 11:56 PM
Claiming to be persecuted is good recruiting.

Life got you down? Not doing as well as you hoped? It's because THEY are persecuting you. Join us, with your contribution, in our fight against the persecutors.

geni
4th January 2004, 01:36 AM
Yes in Saudi Arabia

shemp
4th January 2004, 06:02 AM
Originally posted by c4ts
Only in Ancient Rome, where Nero is caesar.

Anyway, everybody on Planet X is xian by nature.

I must vehemently protest this! All citizens of Planet X worship the Almighty Shemp!

TruthSeeker
4th January 2004, 07:53 AM
Originally posted by shemp


I must vehemently protest this! All citizens of Planet X worship the Almighty Shemp!


That's what I thought. Thanks for the clarification.

neutrino_cannon
4th January 2004, 03:15 PM
Originally posted by geni
Yes in Saudi Arabia

I agree, there are certain sects who would identify themselves as christians, though what constitutes an "actual christian" is up for (pointless) debate, who are subject to persecution by the non-christian majority, or by others who identify themselves as christians.

I will not go so far as to say there is no persecution of ones-who-call-themselves-christians in the US. Remember the Branch Davidians? That could be construed as persecution (I think it was a combustable combination of religious excesses, and incompetant, over reaching morality police) of a group who IIRC called themselves Christians.

Of course, those who posit in line with the afore article would be unlikely to consider the Branch Davidian "real christians" IMO.

DarkMagician
4th January 2004, 04:12 PM
And here's the proof (http://www.infidels.org/misc/humor/lioaca.html)

Dragonrock
5th January 2004, 12:55 PM
Originally posted by shemp


I must vehemently protest this! All citizens of Planet X worship the Almighty Shemp!

I thought they were all Tacoists.

Yahweh
5th January 2004, 02:07 PM
I'm afraid this modern Christian society has no earthly idea of what religious persecution is...

billiefan2000
10th January 2004, 11:36 AM
Originally posted by geni
Yes in Saudi Arabia


Also France and Iran and Kuwait and Philadeplhia Penn. and some parts of China and Russia and India and Belgium and Cuba also have persecution as well



Yahweh,I am afraid Atheists and other Non-Christians dont want to ever acknowledge there is a such thing as Persecution towards Christians

DarkMagician
10th January 2004, 11:54 AM
Originally posted by billiefan2000
Also France and Iran and Kuwait and Philadeplhia Penn. and some parts of China and Russia and India and Belgium and Cuba also have persecution as well

Yahweh,I am afraid Atheists and other Non-Christians dont want to ever acknowledge there is a such thing as Persecution towards Christians No, we wish to let everyone know that everyone gets persecuted. You breathe = you'll be persecuted.

In the US, Christians are a solid majority. They believe that they can get things that they could only get in a theocracy because of "majority rule" (except the Bill of Rights and the other amendments to the Constitution makes sure this never happens). When they do not get said rights because they're in violation of said document, they call themselves "persecuted".

They also get delusional, saying that if they got their way, then all the bad things on earth would cease to exist (when in reality, they'd just get worse).

So, in conclusion:
1. Christians do get persecuted.
2. Though to a sliver of a degree in the US.

billiefan2000
10th January 2004, 12:04 PM
if Christians are a mjaoirty how come many of them arent more vocal about their faith and belief in Jesus Christ

DarkMagician
10th January 2004, 12:17 PM
Originally posted by billiefan2000
if Christians are a mjaoirty how come many of them arent more vocal about their faith and belief in Jesus Christ The definition of "Christian" doesn't have constant vocalization of their beliefs. Some of them are very vocal, while others are not vocal at all, most are REALLY vocal around those that don't share their beliefs.

If I believe the Boogey-Man exists, do I have to talk about him constantly or deny he exists. Heck no!

Zero
10th January 2004, 12:23 PM
I wonder...did Jesus whine on the cross as much as Christians today whine about things?

Yahweh
10th January 2004, 01:00 PM
Originally posted by billiefan2000
Yahweh,I am afraid Atheists and other Non-Christians dont want to ever acknowledge there is a such thing as Persecution towards Christians
I dont believe your statement is true.

Ask atheists if they recognize the existence of "religious persecution". I'm sure they'll acknowledge it.

Personally, I do acknowledge the fact that there is a such thing as Christian Persecution, however I do not believe it is occurring to the extent the Christians want me to believe.

My own personal indifference tells me "Christian who cry "persecution" where there is none isnt likely to buy my pity".

These things do not qualify as Christian persecution:
A secular government
Secular schools
Equal rights for all citizens
Choosing an atheist for a job over a Christian on a basis of qualifications

These things would quality as Christian persecution:
Refusal to let an official hold a place in Office on a basis of his religious beliefs
Firing someone from a job for religious beliefs
Negative benefits for those of the Christian persuasion
Genocide of 6 million Christians in concentration camps

Note: Christian persecution in predominately Muslim countries isnt likely to cut it. The reason: Christians are not the victims of persecution when they actively participate in it (i.e. persecution of homosexuals, Muslims and other non-Christians, various other prejudices, etc.).


My neighbors are survivors of German concentration camps, they have experienced religious persecution to an extreme degree. My oldest sister is 50% African American, my family lived in the Deep South for most of our lives, my sister has been a victim of the ignorance of racial discrimination on more than several occasions.

Unless I'm terribly mistaken, if you could show me a few examples of Christian persecution (I would be most interested in examples from America), then I would appreciate it.

billiefan2000
10th January 2004, 01:51 PM
Define Persecution towards Christians then to me since Atheists would see Christian Persecution happening then

The Central Scrutinizer
10th January 2004, 01:54 PM
Originally posted by Zero
I wonder...did Jesus whine on the cross as much as Christians today whine about things?

No, I think his last words were, "Hey, I can see my house from here!"

c4ts
10th January 2004, 02:06 PM
Originally posted by shemp


I must vehemently protest this! All citizens of Planet X worship the Almighty Shemp!

"Xian" refers to the species. Of course they worship you on Planet X.

Zero
10th January 2004, 02:15 PM
This is sort of like when white Americans complain about being persecuted...they hold most of the power, and have 'forever', so they feel threatened when anyone talks about removing their 'special' status.

neutrino_cannon
10th January 2004, 03:07 PM
I stand by my previous statement. Still actually.

The Branch Davidians, the Covenant Sword and Arm of the Lord, the Momons, and proably a few others I can't think of right now have all experienced vary arguably unfair oppression in America at some point at the hands of the people of the country or the government.

Do you think that those people qualify as christians billiefan2000? I'm going to say you don't, but feel free to suprise me. I somehow think that those groups sum up what christianity was really originally about more than any mainstream groups do today.

I'm positive (that is, I'm willing to posit that) mainstream christians, however loosely defined, are not at any serious risk of being disenfranchised in any major way by the vast majority of America. This includes other christian groups too, there quite peaceful in this country, although they used to be rather hard on each other.

There will always be groups that do not favor you particular set of values, but dissention does not amount to persecution. persecution is Nazis, dissention is Thomas Paine.

evildave
10th January 2004, 03:10 PM
Yes: But mostly by each other in the U.S.

In certain nations where Islamic theocracies rule, you must be Islamic. Being Christian (or trying to spread Christianity) would be a crime there.

In China there's an officially recognized Christian church, but this isn't "good enough" for foreign Christians who keep introducing their own fruity flavors and getting people into trouble.

Yahweh
10th January 2004, 03:38 PM
Originally posted by billiefan2000
Define Persecution towards Christians then to me since Atheists would see Christian Persecution happening then
Atheists are aware of Religious persecution, they are aware of Christian Persecution (primarily in China and Middle East countries), I havent denied that.

However, many folk are unlikely to sympathize because EVERY group (religious, racial, creed, wealth, etc.) has been persecuted at some time to extents all across the spectrum. I would very much disagree with the kinds of persecution that Christians claim are occurring (i.e. phrases which are blantantly false that are meant to demonize others while painting Christians as innocent victims such as "blah blah blah, but when a Christian student wants to pray in school, she is punished and chastized").

If you claim that Christians and Christians alone are the only group being persecuted, then I would respectfully disagree.

If you claim Christians are being persecuted any more than other groups, I'll respectfully disagree.

If you claim Christians do not persecute other groups, I'll respectfully disagree.

If you claim Christians are justified to persecute other groups, I'll respectfully disagree.

If you claim Atheists are not persecuted, I'll respectfully disagree.

Intolerance of all kinds exist everywhere, its a fact of life that some people's ignorance take control of their bodies and force them to do and say bad things, you and other Christians are not alone when it comes to taking the brunt of other's ignorance. However, I would say Christians take much less of the heat of "persecution" than I'm led to believe. People have a habit of unconsciously holding themselves more "special" than the people around them, this is why 94% of colledge professors believe they are better at their jobs than their collegues, this is why Eighty-five percent of medical students think it is improper for politicians to accept gifts from lobbyists yet only 46 percent think it's improper for physicians to accept gifts from drug companies. Its merely a form of unconscious self-deception to think Christians are being persecuted to the extent of anti-Christian mentality or oppression of Christians simply for being Christians.

Now, to answer you intial question:
From Dictionary.com - Persecute (http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=persecute)
To pursue in a manner to injure, grieve, or afflict; to beset with cruelty or malignity; to harass; especially, to afflict, harass, punish, or put to death, for adherence to a particular religious creed or mode of worship.

elliotfc
10th January 2004, 04:58 PM
I agree with Yahweh on this one. I think Christian "persecution" is being overblown.

The analogy I would make is the Ashcroft stuff. Patriot Act stuff is being proclaimed as Gestapo like attacks on civil liberties. Whatever. Why does everything always have to be blown out of proportion?

I'm not championing the Patriot Act here. Let's just take it easy with the demagoguery and stuff. You can't find an ideological or a religious group that isn't *persecuted* in some way or another for some reason or another. I would reserve the use of the word persecution for serious stuff, however. That's just me.

-Elliot

Zero
10th January 2004, 05:05 PM
I think, just so that the Christians can be telling the truth for a change, I am going to start persecuting Christians. Yes, I know it will be hard, but I am willing to make the ultimate sacrifice, so that the entire American Christian population doesn't go to hell for being a bunch of lying whining p*ssies.

Some Friggin Guy
10th January 2004, 05:17 PM
Billiefan, I will freely admit to there being persecution of christians in other countries. I think the primary problem I, personally, have with your statement, is your claim that christians are being persecuted in Philadelphia.

I read your article in the other thread and still fail to see any persecution of christians in it. What I see is someone breaking the law and being punished.

So, would you care to provide any evidence of christians being persecuted in the US?

Zero
10th January 2004, 05:23 PM
Originally posted by billiefan2000
if Christians are a mjaoirty how come many of them arent more vocal about their faith and belief in Jesus Christ Maybe because maybe of them follow the teachings of Jesus and are private with their belief, as Jesus suggests. Remember, the Bible specifically instructs Christians that the Loudest among them likely have the least amount of faith.

elliotfc
10th January 2004, 05:26 PM
Originally posted by Zero
Maybe because maybe of them follow the teachings of Jesus and are private with their belief, as Jesus suggests. Remember, the Bible specifically instructs Christians that the Loudest among them likely have the least amount of faith.

Eh? Can you quote chapter and verse on that one?

What is this about the loudest among them? Chapter and verse?

You may be referring to the Pharisee who goes to temple and beats his breast, sackcloth and ashes, and all that. But that is a public display of what should be a personal activity (going to Temple to pray). That has nothing to do with the commission in the Bible to spread the good news.

-Elliot

Zero
10th January 2004, 05:27 PM
Originally posted by elliotfc


Eh? Can you quote chapter and verse on that one?

What is this about the loudest among them? Chapter and verse?

You may be referring to the Pharisee who goes to temple and beats his breast, sackcloth and ashes, and all that. But that is a public display of what should be a personal activity (going to Temple to pray). That has nothing to do with the commission in the Bible to spread the good news.

-Elliot Yes, but if you spread your nonsense for the sake of appearances, you are damned I tell you...DAMNED!!

billiefan2000
15th January 2004, 08:35 AM
http://bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=17429

WASHINGTON (BP)--The list of suffering reads like Hebrews 11:32-39: churches seized, people dragged from meetings and beaten to death, seeing their homes destroyed, or being arrested for carrying Bibles.

Instead of 2,000 years ago, however, such horrors occur daily across the world, according to several organizations that track reports of religious persecution. The situation is so bad that Forum 18 -- an advocacy organization based in Oslo, Norway -- lists erosion of religious freedom the past 10 years as its leading concern.

Among the abuses:

-- The slaughter of 10,000 Christians in Indonesia over the past five years. Jeff King, president of International Christian Concern (ICC) in Washington, said during this time 1,000 churches have been destroyed, along with 80,000 Christians' homes.

-- The Washington-based Center for Religious Freedom reports that Vietnamese authorities are stepping up their campaign against minority Christians, in some instances threatening to murder spiritual leaders. Last year, the center reported that police beat three Hmong Christians to death, including the 10-year-old child of a church leader.

In addition, the Compass Direct news service in Santa Ana, Calif., has reported the impending trial of a Vietnamese house church leader arrested for resisting an officer last August.

-- Compass Direct reported Dec. 29 that a Chinese house church leader died while in police custody after her arrest by police Oct. 29. The news service reported that Zhang Hongmei, 33, was seen at the police station in heavy chains and injured, and the next day her family learned she had died.

-- In mid-December, Compass reported that a 51-year-old priest was murdered Nov. 14 in Colombia, the second priest to be killed in the country over a three-week period.

Leaders of the three religious freedom organizations encourage Americans to intercede for believers in other parts of the world and spread the word about their plight.

"Americans can help by just telling others and getting the story out," King said. "Most people don't know how bad things are."

David Miller, managing editor of Compass Direct, said various atrocities often don't involve mass numbers of victims and fail to generate headlines.

"There's very little interest in the mainline press," Miller said. "People don't want to read about it. But it's happening, and people need to read about it."

Felix Corley, editor of Forum 18 News Service, said the continuing -- and in some cases, intensified -- nature of attacks on religious freedoms of all people are particularly bothersome.

In recent weeks, Forum 18 has reported on the seizure of a Methodist church in Moscow and the arrest of a Baptist pastor in Turkmenistan. Among other situations Forum 18 is following are continued state atheism in Belarus, repression practiced by Azerbaijan and continued toleration of violence against religious minorities in the former Soviet state of Georgia.

"Sadly, there are other countries which could be added to that list, as well as countries like Saudi Arabia and Indonesia," Corley said.

Saudi Arabia and Indonesia were among offenders listed in the latest International Religious Freedom Report, released Dec. 18 by the U.S. State Department.

The report cited Burma, China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea and Vietnam for totalitarian attempts to control religion. Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan were listed as practicing state hostility toward minority or non-approved religions.

Indonesia appeared in a section reviewing "state neglect of discrimination against, or persecution of, minority or non-approved religions."

However, King said the Indonesian situation is much worse. During a visit to the Southeast Asian nation last fall, he toured villages where Muslim marauders had pillaged and burned a multitude of homes.

While some Christians have since rebuilt, others are afraid to return, ICC's president said. In addition to loss of life and property, countless numbers of Christians have had hands or feet cut off or been subjected to forced circumcision, King said.

Although the government finally dispatched troops to quell the violence, about 30 Christians were killed during the last three months of 2003, King said. He believes that is an ominous indicator that the situation is heating up again, noting that hostilities typically resume after troops withdraw.

Among attacks last fall was a bombing raid on the Indonesian village of Old Bethlehem, Miller said. Nine people died and 11 were injured in the attack. "People are starting to flee because the military is unwilling or unable to protect them," he noted.

Another troublesome spot is Sudan, where more than 10 Christian churches and a church-run vocational training center were destroyed the past two months, according to Compass Direct.

It appears a peace treaty between Muslims and Christians may be forthcoming, the ICC's King said, but the government has a long history of not honoring its agreements.

The United Nations has declared a humanitarian crisis in the Sudanese city of Darfur, labeling the situation "the worst in the world today," King said. Actions taken by Arab-backed militias against Sudanese Christians amount to ethnic cleansing, he said, quoting a statement by the UN's humanitarian coordinator for the Sudan.

Other leading concerns expressed by King and Miller include:

-- North Korea

"North Korea is a place where they put you to death or put you in prison if you have a Bible," King said. "There's two kinds of death, one slow and one quick. Yet there is an underground church. The more they try to stamp it out, the more the light shines."

-- Eritrea, in the Red Sea region, which was cited by the State Department for discriminatory legislation or policies against certain religions.

The only recognized faiths there are Orthodox, Evangelical Lutheran, Muslim and Catholic, Miller said. A full-gospel church center was recently confiscated by the government and more than 300 Pentecostals imprisoned for having Bibles, attending house church meetings or sharing their faith, he said.

Among them were 62 teenagers who were arrested last year at a military summer camp, locked in metal shipping containers and told to renounce their faith, Miller said. While most were released, the Compass editor said another 75 soldiers are still being held for the same reason.

-- India

In the world's largest democracy, a Hindu fundamentalist movement has led to laws against converting to other faiths, Miller said.

Often, Hindus will attack Christian schools, churches or evangelical rallies, beating believers with sticks, he said. If police come, the attackers claim their victims were blaspheming their gods.

"It's a lot like Nazi Germany in the 1930s, where people used anti-Semitic laws to attack the Jews," Miller said. "Hindu nationalists share some of the same fascist ideology as the Nazis in Germany."

Although the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church is observed the second Sunday of November, these observers urge Americans to participate in continuing prayer vigils.

When believers who have faced oppression are asked how others can assist them, their first answer is, "Pray," Miller said. He suggested dedicating a particular Sunday or including it as an ongoing request on church prayer lists.

"They've given us testimony after testimony of how prayer has made a difference," the Compass editor said. "It's the most effective thing we can do, and it's something every Christian can do."

Believers also can assist such organizations as Open Doors, Christian Solidarity and Voice of the Martyrs, which help persecuted Christians and families by providing Bibles, training and supplies, Miller said.

King also is an advocate of focused prayer. In addition, ICC's president said Christians can help by sending aid to ministries at work in the Sudan, Cuba and other oppressed nations and by staying informed.

"Basically, keeping up to date on the [Internet] so they know who to call and when to sign petitions," King said. "People can work through agencies like ICC and the Jubilee Campaign ... that work on Capitol Hill to influence senators, congressmen and others who have a hot button for this issue."

DVFinn
15th January 2004, 08:58 AM
Certainly christians are persecuted in many places throughout the world, including the US. In the US however I would have to say christians are the least persecuted of any organized superstition.

if Christians are a mjaoirty how come many of them arent more vocal about their faith and belief in Jesus Christ

I have trouble taking this question seriously. Politicians cite their religion as their inspiration, judges put up election signs touting their commitment to the bible. I can't drive 10 miles from my home without seeing half a dozen christian billboard or church signs. Mormons and JWs come to my door at least once a month to spread their silly nonsense. There are 3 christian cable networks carried as part of the basic service package here. Christians are the most vocal religious group in the country. Every third car I pass on the highway has a jesus fish emblem. One of the reasons many of us non-christians get so annoyed with christian retoric is that the appostolic traditions demands that they spread their faith to others.

How much more vocal should they be? Not that I object to their right to proclaim their faith. They're entitled to it. But to ask why aren't they more vocal about it?

epepke
15th January 2004, 08:58 AM
Originally posted by billiefan2000



Also France and Iran and Kuwait and Philadeplhia Penn. and some parts of China and Russia and India and Belgium and Cuba also have persecution as well



Yahweh,I am afraid Atheists and other Non-Christians dont want to ever acknowledge there is a such thing as Persecution towards Christians

:con2: If it's reasonable to conclude "Christians are persecuted [yes/no]" based on the undeniable fact that some Christians are persecuted, then it's also reasonble to conclude "Christians are violent pedophiles [yes/no]" based on the undeniable fact that some Christians are violent pedophiles.

If the question is whether Christians are generally violent pedophiles, then the answer is no. Concommitantly, if the question is whether Christians are generally persecuted, the answer is also no.

Atheism has nothing to do with it. You just don't get to have a different standard for when you're whingeing from the standard you get when you're beating your chest.

Zero
15th January 2004, 10:26 AM
Christians are a bunch of crybabies. Plus, in the case of billiefan and others, my real question is: is Christian suffering worldwide qualitatively different than the suffering of Muslims, Jews, Atheists, Buddhists, or anyone else who faces persecution? If not, then why make a special big deal about Christiian suffering, besides selfishness and ego?

Cleon
15th January 2004, 10:40 AM
This whole thread reminds of an old "Weekend Update" with Norm McDonald. Apparently the Scientologists were whining that Germany (which, like many European countries, has anti-cult laws) were "oppressing their religion." Norm continued...

"To which the German government responded, 'We're Germans. When we oppress your religion, you'll know it!'"

Ruby
15th January 2004, 12:02 PM
Originally posted by TruthSeeker
This article (http://http://www.beliefnet.com/story/137/story_13788_1.html) presents the background.

We've all read it over at Rapture Ready, too. Christians are being persecuted, apparently.

Partly, this is part of Jesus' prophecy, so in a way, is a good thing.

Anyway, what do you say? Are Christians being persecuted?

Not in this country...as far as I know. In other countries they are...but so are other people of various other religions depending on where you go.

When I was a Christian, I was treated as part of an elite group. Almost everyone I knew and met was a Christian. That includes all my Doctors. I was never ever treated ill for it...and never saw or heard of another being treated ill for it. Still, there were complaints that there was not enough "God" in schools etc. Everything was "more God". Atheist, secular humanist, buddhists, and sometimes even Catholics, were considered being used by satan. They were also considered part of the mission field. You were only to make friends in order to witness...even if your witness was subtle and slow.......but if after several months of nothing happening to convert them, you should carefully pull back your friendship to just being civil. Now, that was not the attitude of all Christians, it was just the way that I...and many others were taught to behave.

It got to a point where I could not handle the duplicity of making "secular" friends just to witness to them. I began to make online friends of various beliefs and did not witness. This brought many accusations my way from online christians. They said I was "pandering to the dark side" and headed for danger. If anything, I've had more persecution from Christian themselves than anything else.

Now that I am a Unitarian/Secular humanist, I am more aware of how some Christians react to or treat non-Christians. I find it appalling.

So many atheists and agnostics hide their beleifs for fear of what might happen...even the potential to lose their job.

Where I live, In Texas, you see so many cars with Jesus fishies on their bumpers. You never see an atheist symbol or a pagan symbol or humanist or Unitarian. Some brave people do have democrat bumper stickers. Now there might be vehicles with non-Christian symbols on them, but I've been looking and looking and I never see any..............not even on the cars of the members from my Unitarian fellowship. You might end up with a keyed car if you put on some secular symbol.

So, I get pretty ticked off when Christians start running on about being persecuted. However, I know it's just a sort of brainwashed view. I had it once too. I would not...could not face the facts. I had to believe that we had it rough...even though I knew we had it great....if that makes any sense!!!

Dragonrock
15th January 2004, 12:15 PM
Telling themselves that they are persecuted makes them feel strong and brave. They point to how they are standing against the tide of atheism. It also gives them an excuse when laws regulating drinking or sunday shop hours are overturned as being religious. They are already good at seeing only what they want to, so they just datamine for attacks against christians to show that evil is afoot.

daenku32
15th January 2004, 01:17 PM
Originally posted by DarkMagician
And here's the proof (http://www.infidels.org/misc/humor/lioaca.html)

I nominate it as website of the month!

c4ts
15th January 2004, 01:28 PM
This whole idea that Christians are being persecuted is outdated. There was a time when they were a persecuted minority, but now that time is over and they're the ones doing the persecuting, and they're so good at it they even attack each other for not being Christian enough. They isolate themselves. They preach that intolerance is love, and go around "loving" everybody, fighting imaginary demons until real people get hurt.

Mona
15th January 2004, 05:23 PM
Originally posted by Cleon
This whole thread reminds of an old "Weekend Update" with Norm McDonald. Apparently the Scientologists were whining that Germany (which, like many European countries, has anti-cult laws) were "oppressing their religion." Norm continued...

"To which the German government responded, 'We're Germans. When we oppress your religion, you'll know it!'"

Germany does persecute Scientologists, as well as members of other new religions. Cult = religion I do not like, usually a new one challenging the hegemony of mainstream religions. The more hysterical anti-cult groups in the U.S. are Xian-based, and they make it a mission to demonize and persecute members of other, new religions. From a UVA site addressing religious movements (link following):

"The Church of Scientology has faced its greatest opposition in Germany, where, according to the Associated Press, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl's government believes Scientology is a threat to Germany's democracy. Also, the Church is considered an enterprise and German Scientologists are prohibited from public jobs and under close surveillance. The United States Department of State issued a highly critical report summarizing problems of religious freedom in Germany. 38

Numerous commissions have been organized in Germany, not only to investigate Scientology but other religious movements as well. The German government classifies these groups as possible "sects and pyscho-groups." The commissions continue to investigate Scientologists in Germany. A final report on cults by the German commission created by the Bundestag was issued in June 1998. 38 Prior to the release of this report, six German professors issued an essay condemning the German State for "once more taking part in the defamation of and discrimination against religious and ideological minorities." 40 The professors cite bias among the members of the Enquiry Commission and inadequacies in the commission's interim report."




This discuses Xian activities to persecute members of new American religions: counter cult movement (http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/cultsect/counter.htm)

Scientology in general: including discussion of Germany (http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/scientology.html)

evildave
15th January 2004, 05:53 PM
Of course, the other shoe is, when Christians persecute each other (like Southern Baptists versus Mormons - remember MORMONS?), usually "They're not REAL Christians" comes up, so naturally Christians aren't persecuting each other.

Just had to clarify.

Roadtoad
15th January 2004, 06:43 PM
Sorry to disagree with you, EvilDave, but the reality is that if you're a Nazarene, the Baptists are evil Bible Thumpers. If you're a Baptist, those Methodists are backsliding heathens. If you're Assemblies of God, EVERYONE is screwed up, because they don't have the Holy Spirit.

You know, this whole concept is a pantload. Seriously. Yes, there's genuine persecution of Christians in this world. Christians are being singled out in some nations and persecuted. The same can be said, (and is), about Buddhists, Confucians, Taoists, Hindus, Sikhs, Muslims, and a whole host of other religious adherents. Yes, it's genuinely sad that there's people who are being persecuted for their beliefs.

But you know the upshot of this? Look at the actions of some of these people, and you'll realize that in some (not all) cases, the people being "persecuted" are actually being prosecuted for breaking the law.

I've seen this. We had in Sacramento a group who was protesting as a part of Operation Rescue in front of a Planned Parenthood clinic. They were ordered by a judge to NOT block the entrance. When they refused to disperse, the cops used pepper spray and cleared them out. They were given numerous warnings to move out, but they chose to stay and be idiots. They were not PERSECUTED in any way, shape, or form.

There have been religious schools run in this nation. They were in many cases given opportunities to gain the necessary accreditation, and continue to operate. They chose to ignore the state legislatures, and they chose to thumb their noses at the courts. They were shut down. HELLOOOOOOO! This is not persecution, this is legal, ethical, and moral PROSECUTION in regards to the breaking of a law.

Tell you what, folks. Talk to me about religious persecution in the U.S. when you have something that warrants it. Most Christians in the U.S. think they're "suffering for Christ's sake" if they have to share a pew with someone who goes to a different country club, or someone who works at a "lesser" job than they do.

Persecuted... Good God. And some people wonder why I think they have sh** for brains!

the_ignored
17th January 2004, 08:06 PM
No, but they sure like to make out that they are (http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/2045.asp) .

espritch
18th January 2004, 09:13 AM
I voted "Yes, but not on planet X". A more correct answer would be "yes, but not to any significant degree in the US", but that wasn't an option.

Roadtoad
18th January 2004, 10:49 AM
Originally posted by the_ignored
No, but they sure like to make out that they are (http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/2045.asp) .

And in reading that, I thought, "Yeah, you won't get a PhD for bad science. You won't get a job writing for a newspaper or magazine if you support kooky ideas. And you won't get Federal or State funds to open a museum to provide propaganda for bad science."

If that's persecution, then let them be persecuted.

Zero
18th January 2004, 11:12 AM
Originally posted by the_ignored
No, but they sure like to make out that they are (http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/2045.asp) . Wow, AiG is just filled with retarded people, isn't it?