Saturday, February 11, 2012

Another month

Another couple of months have passed and I am back in a writing mood, so here it goes. The topic for today is keeping the positives in our lives while eliminating (or trying to eliminate) the negatives. I have had a dear friend from my past who de-friended me on Facebook because she was "offended" by the opinions posted on some of my posts. She was not offended so much by me, but by some of my other friends' writing and opinions in response to my posts. On Facebook, I tend to post politically themed reports, information from conservative themed websites, and then respond to thoughts and responses from friends.. It can get a little heated at times, but it is a great way to see all sides of an issue that you feel is important to you. If you are offended by the topic, you have a few choices: defend your opinion with positive facts, defend your opinion with non-fact based rants that might include language that is not especially polite, or simply walk away from the discussion of the topic at hand. In the case of this friend, she walked away from the topics, and send me a personal message explaining why she would be defriending  me... unlike some other friends who simply defriended me with no explanation. I do not really care one way or the other, but I have always thought that simply hiding from the discussion shows weakness and a lack of conviction. If you have beliefs, stand up for them and defend them. Listen to any points the opposite side may bring up. Be willing to cede a point if one is convincingly made.
This brings me to the recent uproar about what I see as government interfering in a religion's right to worship how they see fit, versus what others see as a church trying to impose their beliefs on others and take away what they view as a right, that is, a woman's right to control her body. I will put this as succinctly as possible: The Constitution as it is written trumps everything else as far as laws go. The government is expressly forbidden from interfering in the affairs of a church and how they wish to worship. Period. There have been times when this right was taken away from groups in this country, and now all people of faith need to ensure that what is starting with an attack on Catholic organizations does not blossom into a full fledged attack on all religions. The right to worship how we see fit is written clearly into the Constitution, unlike other so called "rights" that have been interpreted to be there, like the right to privacy that is cited to uphold abortion as a right. As long as the worship of a church does not infringe on others in such a way to deprive them of life or liberty, it should be untouchable. In simple terms, Muslims who kill their daughters under the guise of "honor killings" do not have the right to exercise this aspect of their religious beliefs because it denies life to the daughter. Likewise, members of cults can worship how they want until it starts physically restricting people who might want to leave, because they are denying these people their liberty..

In closing, I quote Joseph Smith: "We claim the privilege of worshipping almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what  they may." -Articles of Faith #11

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