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Previous comments... You are currently on page 4.
There is no separation of Church and State. It is not in the Constitution. All the Constitution addresses is the creation of a national church, such as the Anglican; beyond that it specifically says that the federal government will not legislate with concern to the FREE EXERCISE of religion.
corrected....
The Immortal Bard?
Sauce for the gander....
Oh, wait... establishment of religion.... nm.
You do not have the privilege to discriminate against me for my exercise of this right and just as it's very poor form to verbally (or via written word) to engage in discrimination on the basis of race, sex, color it's also discrimination to accuse one of engaging in "mystical primitivism from thousands of years ago" in the exercise of that religion, just as any would consider it great discrimination (and very poor taste) to accuse a Native American of being racially lacking in intellectual acuity.
There are certain protected classes recognized by law and those who choose to engage in religion ARE one such class.
In the common parlance of today, "Get over it".
The intentional misuse of the so called "Exclusion Clause" makes me apoplectic,
principally because those people who are using it to deny the existence of God, prevent those of us who do, from worshiping or observing as we might chose to do.
It is the Tyranny of the Minority! Imposing their will on others.
And in so far as the Un-Constitutional U.S. Department of Education goes, we need to sue them, along with all the other progressive alpha-numeric farm in Washington, out of existence in the Courts.
Read the book if you're going to complain to me about dates. Freaking act like a century-old archaeologist doesn't have a clue what he's talking about when he unearths clear evidence that proves exactly what Luke said. "old" doesn't mean "stupid".
Blaiklock was a literature professor, not an historian, and perhaps had a strong opinion on the subject being a christian apologetic.
You must forgive my cynicism at McDowell's effort in trying to disprove the bible.
These are people who believed the answer before constructing the hypothesis or argument.
Thank god for the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment!
To specifically answer your question (which is covered by Josh McDowell in much better detail), here's a few summary quotes:
Sir William Ramsay wrote that "Luke is a historian of the first rank; not merely are his statements of fact trustworthy... [he] should be placed along with the very greatest of historians."[Ramsay, The Bearing Of Recent Discovery On The Trustworthiness Of The New Testament, 222, 1915]
Professor of classics at Auckland University, E.M. Blaiklock, wrote: "For accuracy of detail, and for evocation of atmosphere, Luke stands, in fact, with Thucydides. The Acts of the Apostles is not shoddy product of pious imagining, but a trustworthy record... it was the spadework of archaeology which first revealed the truth."[Blaiklock, The Archaeology of the New Testament, page 96, Zondervan Publishing Houst, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1970]
There's numerous others.
and self-righteousness. For that reason, until kids are of college maturity and thus able (at least from a physical standpoint) to study a religious tract intellectually, I feel that the Bible should be banned from public schools. Parochial schools are fine:) As others have pointed out here, if there were no publicly funded schools in the first place, this controversy would not exist.
I have no issue teaching the bible as a great book, along with the qur'an and others, as long as it is not taught as fact. However, a whole class dedicated to just the bible (which one by the way?) does not belong in public secondary education. Perhaps in college.
This is just another example of a grab for power and influence by a zealot.
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