ArchivedLeftists Treat Christianity as Cancerhttp://www.newsmax.com/archives/article ... 4824.shtml
Limbaugh: Leftists Treat Christianity as 'Cancer'
Phil Brennan, NewsMax.com
Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2003
In his new, best-selling book, "Persecution: How Liberals Are Waging War Against Christianity," David Limbaugh exposes the outrageous bias and discrimination against Christians. Read Part I in this series, Intolerant 'Liberals' Wage War on Christianity.
The extremity of the war against Christianity was manifested in Madison, Wis., where transit authorities sought to honor the late Mother Teresa by putting her image on the metro pass in April 2003, a distinction later planned for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Mohandas Gandhi.
The idea, however, infuriated one Annie Laurie Gaynor, the president of the appropriately named Freedom From Religion Foundation. She claimed that using Mother Teresa’s picture on the bus pass was "an insult to Madisonians who value women’s rights and separation of church and state."
Mother Teresa, she charged, was unworthy of being honored because she "lived in parts of the world where she saw firsthand the overwhelming poverty and tragedy resulting from women’s lack of access to birth control. Yet she campaigned stridently throughout her life at every opportunity against access to contraception, sterilization and abortion for anyone."
This about a saintly woman who became famous because of her years of going into the streets of Calcutta, gathering the destitute and dying, taking them to her convent, bathing them, cleansing their festering sores and helping them to die with dignity.
Wrote an astonished Limbaugh: "So this remarkably strong woman, Mother Teresa – world-renowned for her selfless lifetime of charity works in poverty-stricken nations, whose Missionaries of Charity Order was sanctioned by the pope and who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her astonishingly good works – is an ‘insult’ to women’s rights’?"
The author cites numerous examples of attacks on Christianity at local, state and federal levels.
In Alabama, after Gov. Bob Riley together with his cabinet members and senior staff began having weekly voluntary Bible studies, Larry Darby, the Alabama director of American Atheists, attacked the sessions as "a form of Christian terrorism."
This was the same Darby who joined with the notoriously anti-Christian ACLU and Southern Poverty Law Center in the successful attempt to remove the Ten Commandments monument from the Alabama State Judicial Building.
Even though the First Continental Congress opened with two hours of prayer and the first session of the U.S. Supreme Court on Sept. 24, 1789 began with a four-hour communion service, Americans for Separation of Church and State protested plans to use the U.S. Capitol Rotunda for prayer sessions for members of Congress.
"The U.S. Capitol is not a revival tent," stormed the group’s president, Barry Lynn. He suggested that if members of Congress wanted religious service they should "go to their houses of worship."
Secularist attempts to ban any use of Christmas symbols on public property are rife all across the nation, and in many places even the mention of the word Christmas is banned. Government schools now tend to refer to Christmas as a "winter festival" or as some other pagan celebration.
Hooray for Satan
The monomania of ACLU's war on religion was illustrated when the organization set out to sue Carolyn Rusher, mayor of Inglis, Fla., for denouncing Satan.
Every Halloween night for nine years Rusher had issued a proclamation banning Satan from city limits and posting it on her office wall and four other places in the tiny municipality.
"Be it known from this day forward that Satan, ruler of darkness, giver of evil, destroyer of what is good and just, is not now, nor ever again will be, a part of this town, Inglis. Satan is hereby declared powerless, no longer ruling over, nor influencing, our citizens."
Taking up a complaint from a resident, ACLU eagerly planned to file suit, that, if successful, would ostensibly make Satan welcome in Inglis.
When the complaining resident said she was unwilling to file the suit, ACLU said it would go ahead on its own, no doubt to the delight of the prince of darkness.
Anti-Christian hostility became blatantly obvious when Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and his leftist comrades began attacking some of President Bush’s nominees to the federal bench for the crime of having religious principles he feared might influence their judicial decisions.
When the president nominated J. Leon Holmes, a devout Roman Catholic and opponent of abortion, to the federal bench, Sens. Schumer, Dianne Feinstein and alleged Catholic Dick Durbin became unhinged.
Schumer stormed, "This man is an embarrassment to be nominated – this guy is so far off the deep end."
As Limbaugh notes: "Undeniably, the litmus test is as clear as it is unconstitutional: Practicing Catholics need not apply."
Churches as Cancer
Real estate has become a battleground in the war against Christianity. All across America zoning laws are being used to ban construction of churches, the excuse being that they are a public nuisance and supposedly lower the values of real estate where they are built or attract too many of the wrong sort of worshippers.
In Castle Hills, Texas, Castle Hills Baptist Church was compared to a cancer. In a lawsuit against the church, city officials stated that the church "seems to grow like a cancer, feeding on homes in much the same way as a cancerous tumor feeds on healthy cells."
In Portland, Ore., zoning authorities ordered Sunnyside Centenary United Methodist Church to curtail its meals program for poor families and homeless people and demanded that attendance at all events, including Sunday services, be limited to 70 people. They even further restricted Wednesday night Bible classes and other uses of the church.
The abuse of zoning as a weapon against churches finally got so bad that Congress passed a law in 2000 forbidding any discrimination against churches by zoning authorities.
Editor's Note: Get "Persecution: How Liberals Are Waging War Against Christianity," the latest book by the author of "Absolute Power." David Limbaugh exposes the farce of leftist "tolerance" and reveals the true agenda of "liberals" who abuse the law to force Christianity out of the public square. Click here now.
Guys, this is truly frightening. Soon, Christians will not even be allowed to practice their religion PERIOD. But even if they pass a law that states that I cannot worship my Heavenly Father and Savior, I will not back down. If there are laws that protect a woman's supposed right to murder her child, then there should NOT be a law that forbids me and my fellow Christians from practicing our religion in peace.
And if one of you dares to say that Christians are not persecuted, here is the definition of the word "persecution." Look at it closely, and then tell me that we are not being persecuted every day.
persecution
\Per`se*cu"tion\, n. [F. pers['e]cution, L. persecutio.] 1. The act or practice of persecuting; especially, the infliction of loss, pain, or death for adherence to a particular creed or mode of worship.
With the exception of the latter, a majority of the Christians in the United States are being subjected to these very things. Every day, the ACLU takes great pleasure in limiting the Christians' rights while, at the same time, this very same organization embraces disgusting organizations like NAMBLA. When it is that very same organization that is harmful to US citizens. But the ACLU denies that, choosing, instead, to label good, kind-hearted Christians as the ones who are harming our fellow citizens.
I am tired of the ACLU interfering in my first amendment rights, and I am tired of extreme liberals ignoring the fact that yes, Christians are being persecuted. Every day, we hear the ACLU screaming about how homosexuals are being discriminated against. But you never once hear the ACLU rising to defend Christians.
I don't know about you, but I am greatly concerned that extreme liberals, atheists, and everyone else who hates Christians are becoming modern day versions of the Nazi's.
Look, you don't have to agree or even like the Christian religion. That's your opinion and, although I don't respect it, I do respect your right to have that opinion. All I'm asking is for you to stop and think before you send money to an organization who would do these things.
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