I came across the following and wanted to share it with you:
(ascribed to King Solomon)
"Lord, Lord of our fathers, Lord of mercy, in wisdom you made man to rule over all creation, a steward to the world...to administer justice with a righteous heart. Give me wisdom, O Lord, wisdom who sits right by your throne, and don't refuse me a place with your servants." (emphasis is mine)
I could go a million different directions with this, but I'll try to keep it short and sweet. The so-called "Religious Right" spends all their time fighting against the very things Kind Solomon (universally recognized as one of the wisest men to ever live) prayed to God for, and in the process they have become the modern day Pharisees and Sadjucees (look 'em up). I can't help but think that if G.W. Bush paid more attention to these passages and less attention to Karl Rove then maybe we'd have held off on Iraq, or at least wouldn't be sacrificing the lives of other peoples' kids just to try and make a point.
I am a Christian. I am proud of it. I believe that as a Christian I have an obligation to spread the love of Christ, to spread the compassion of Christ, to do my best to take care of the gifts that God has given me (my home, my family, my friends, my country, my planet), and treat others as the brothers and sisters in God that I believe they are. Even when they piss me off. (After all, you can't choose your relatives.) I do not always succeed, but that doesn't make me a bad person. It also doesn't give me the right to harp on others' short comings to divert attention away from my own. It just means that I am human. Just like everyone else.
(So much for short and sweet.)
Thank you for listening (if you actually made it down this far).
I am one Christian who is NOT represented by the "Religious Right"

By MrCrowder - Posted on October 16th, 2007















I'm not saying you didn't make the connection or anything, but what religious right are you talking about? I mean, yeah, King Solomon is known for his wisdom and everything but...eh? Explain the connection between religious right and Iraq and the rest of the blog for me?
I guess my point is that King Solomon took very seriously his role as steward of the planet and protector of justice. However, many in the so called "religious right" could give a shit less about justice for anyone not of their social standing or their same belief system. Also, most of them continually vote against even the most basic of environmental legislation and do all they can to protect polluters as long as those people and the companies they head pour dollar after dollar into re-election campaigns.
Finally, King Solomon saw being kind as a God given responsibility. Most of the jackasses up on Capital Hill see their place in government as a God given right.
There's nothing like a trail of blood to find your way back home.--Nikki Sixx
I see another religious abuse scandal coming- it isn't sexual, but its activity parallels in harmfulness
It was difficult enough when the Catholic sexual abuse scandal came out. People who were supposed to be the most trusted took sexual advantage of children. To made matters worse parishioners knowingly covered it up.
The consequences of the sexual abuse were severe. First there was the initial suffering the children endured. Then there was the economic hardship imposed on the Church. Finally there was the suffering the children and others endured after the initial abuse. Many were shunned for speaking out. Others turned to drinking, drugs, sexual promiscuity, and even suicide.
In the Catholic Church, Protecting God's Children, a program to educate about the signs of abuse was made a requirement for anyone working around children. The program was designed to help educate about sexual abuse and what signs to look for in the victim and the abuser. That should have been the end of things, but another form of abuse and cover up actively crept into Christianity. It was psychological abuse.
Psychological abuse might sound vague at first, but when one begins to look at psychological abuse on the level of what blacks endured during slavery or Jews endured during Hitler's reign, it is a little easier to comprehend. These incidents were a type of psychological abuse done on a coordinated group level to cleanse society and keep people in their place. Today instead of blacks and Jews it is homosexuals, abortionists, and others that need to be cleansed and Muslims and others who need to be kept in their place.
As a result of these viewpoints, two very, very different psychological abuse patterns have escalated in society.
First, instead of looking at the behavior and actions of homosexuals and abortionists as a manifestation of a past abuse, similar to the actions of those abused by Catholics who were mentioned earlier, many are unable to look beyond the signs of abuse – of drinking, drugs, sexual promiscuity, suicide, homosexuality, and abortions to face the initial psychological abuse as the cause. Then when the abused victims act out their suffering they are getting abused a second time, this time by people trying to cleanse society.
The second is an entirely different perspective. Rather than looking at homosexuality and people of the Muslim faith as a difference to be accepted such as people of the Jewish faith or people with black skin color, the natural difference whether it is skin color or sexual orientation or the freedom to hold a different religious belief, the difference is seen as the problem. Then when these new differences became a strong focus a segregated society and all the problems that go with it began to be created in America.
A new path needs to be taken because these two patterns only foster additional turmoil. An inspiring model is the way the Catholic Church successfully faced their issue and brought about a healthy openness and awareness of sexual abuse and prevention through the Protecting God's Children program. Christianity as a whole needs to adopt a similar method to bring about a healthy openness and awareness of psychological abuse, its consequences, and its prevention. In 2008, I hope we elect someone to do this.
Lou Wms
Columbus, Ohio
I'm not real clear on how your reply, as well intentioned as it was, relates to my original post or to my explanation of my main points.
There's nothing like a trail of blood to find your way back home.--Nikki Sixx