D
dianetavegia
Guest
I can't find the thread now but the concept of soul liberty was being discussed under another topic this week.
My question is: When does Soul Liberty end and become distorted with Political Correctness?
I did a search on soul liberty and found mostly churches quoting Roger Williams: And Roger Williams would vehemently counter that the New Testament forbids "imposing upon the soul of the people a religion, a worship, a ministry." The state, he would say, must do everything possible to protect "soul liberty," the freedom of each individual to follow his or her own conscience in matters of faith.
Where does soul liberty end and my responsibility to stand firm on God's word begin? When are we to draw the line when one group endorses something we clearly, as fundamental Baptists, see as contrary to God's word?
Has soul liberty become distorted and now being abused to make fundamental Christian's look like the bad guy?
My question is: When does Soul Liberty end and become distorted with Political Correctness?
I did a search on soul liberty and found mostly churches quoting Roger Williams: And Roger Williams would vehemently counter that the New Testament forbids "imposing upon the soul of the people a religion, a worship, a ministry." The state, he would say, must do everything possible to protect "soul liberty," the freedom of each individual to follow his or her own conscience in matters of faith.
Where does soul liberty end and my responsibility to stand firm on God's word begin? When are we to draw the line when one group endorses something we clearly, as fundamental Baptists, see as contrary to God's word?
Has soul liberty become distorted and now being abused to make fundamental Christian's look like the bad guy?
DianeBelievers Should Remember "Soul Liberty,"
Respect Rights of Non-believers
By Charles C. Haynes
www.teachingaboutreligion.org
Goal
To provide academic information and teaching materials related to teaching about religion in public schools in support of:
an educational commitment to pluralism,
acknowledgment that public schools are for students of all worldviews, whether religious or nonreligious, and
the professional understanding that public school teachers need to exercise a scrupulous neutrality regarding religion.