Separation of church and state
Overview
"The separation of church and state is a concept and philosophy in modern thought and practice, whereby the structures of state or national government are proposed as needing to be separate from those of religious institutions. The concept has long been a topic of political debate throughout history." -- [W]
United States
This separation has become of particular interest lately in the United States, in that there has been a strong cultural movement to "include [the Christian] God" in daily life, and to "put God back" into various arenas from which religion had generally been excluded. Supporters, especially on the religious right, claim that the US is a Christian nation, often backing up this claim with revisionist history and quotes from early US historical documents taken out of context.
Some resultant issues include prayer in public schools and the wording of The Pledge of Allegiance.
Points for Discussion
- How is it bad if God is excluded? How is it bad if God is included? Does "including God" include all religions, or are some disqualified as being pagan, heathen, etc.?
- Why should an atheist feel excluded, or even threatened, when God is mentioned? (see discussion page for more)
Links
Reference
Projects
Commentary
- 2007-10-02 Critical Mass: Bishops Advise Supreme Court On The Laws Of God by Rob Boston
- 2007-09-20 A Lesson on Why Liberals Worship Separation of Church and State (see also: Rush Limbaugh)
- 2007-09-14 Russian Roulette: Orthodox Church Leaders Seek Influence Over Public Schools by Rob Boston: "One of the most foolish arguments the Religious Right uses against church-state separation is that the concept is communistic."
- 2006-11-12 Public school teacher tells class: "You belong in hell": an example of why separation is important
- 2005-12-?? why the mail is no longer delivered on Sunday by Susan Jacoby: some history on separation of church and state in the US
- highlights and commentary by Arthur Silber
Discussion
- TruthMapping: Should there be a division between church and state?