Thursday, August 31, 2006

Liar, Liar

Katherine Harris has stirred things up again with her recent comments that the separation of church and state is "a lie" and that electing non-Christians to office is to "legislate sin."

While there is some legitimate debate around the history of the doctrine of church-state separation, it's not like the concept was foreign to the Founders. Thomas Jefferson wrote about it in his famous letter to the Danbury Baptist Association. And the idea goes back further in the writings and ideals of Baptist Roger Williams, as well. And in any case, the concept of separation between the government and the religious is well-established and is not a seriously questioned constitutional principle.

I find Rep. Harris' comment that electing non-Christians to office would be akin to legislating sin to be peculiar. I'm not sure if she assumes that Christians in office are immune from legislating sin, or if she believe that non-Christians are just incapable of doing good. In either case, who defines what a "sin" is? If we were in Iran, Rep. Harris would be sinning by speaking out in the first place.

Perhaps her ideas of legislating sin are informed by her other strange comment - that the nation's Founders did not intend for America to be "a nation of secular laws." What, pray tell, makes a law "secular?" For that matter, what makes a law "sacred?" Can a law ever be both? A good case can be made that murder would be illegal even in a society devoid of religious influence. The idea that my rights stop where another person's nose begins is very appealing to even the atheists of this country. Self-preservation is a universal trait of all living beings.

Rep. Harris' comments are problematic on several levels, but perhaps the most troubling aspect is that she is starting with a strange view that artificially separates the secular from the sacred in exactly the way that the Founders did not want them to be separated. She does this only to turn around and fuse them where the Founding Fathers sought to separate them! While the faith of people should guide their decisions and behavior in elections and in government, faith should never become the concern of the government. Government should govern for the good of all its citizens, regardless of race, creed, color, gender, or age, and the church, mosque, synagogue should be above the politics of the day so that each may continue to be a prophetic witness to society.

2 comments:

Seven Star Hand said...

Bush's Gift Horse has Hoof in Mouth, again!

Hello Craig and all,

This gets to the root of the problem of deluded and greedy politicians who seek to impose their own ignorance on millions of others. Because of our reliance on money, politics, and religion, we are teetering on the verge of worldwide disaster. Idiots like Ms. Harris couldn't care less about everyone else as long as they get their hands on wealth and power, even if it means pretending to serve the Creator. It is long past time that people stand up for truth and justice and give these scoundrels their due.

Read more here...

Peace...

Anonymous said...

I would not be so bold as to ever judge the motives of the actions of others. I give Ms. Harris the full benefit of the doubt that she believes what she says and that what she has said is formed by her faith in God. Regardless, though that may be, her comments (and, I presume, her beliefs that inform those comments) run afoul of American history and settled constitutional principles.