Imagine one denomination having the most voters in a state. Imagine that faith getting its people elected, and then having the politicians declare THEIR faith the official religion of the state.
Every state has a state tree, flower, etc. But, religion?
Clarence Thomas, a Roman Catholic, has stated his opinion that it should be this way:
http://blogcritics.org/politics/article/clarence-thomas-and-state-theocracy/
Preferred Treatment
Discussion in 'Other Christian Denominations' started by Nevada, Oct 22, 2011.
-
Thomas has written an interesting analysis. Under the Articles Of Confederation -which the "constitutional rebellion/revolution overthrew - Maryland could have become a Catholic state (sovereign entity), Vermont a Presbyterian state, and Utah an LDS state. How would this have harmed the USA as long as there was freedom to travel between the states?
We would now consist of 50 competing nation/states and the nation/state with the most progressive government - ALL things considered - would attract the largest population and resulting assets. I suspect the least free state - all things considered - would have the worst economy. -
Those unable to move to another state would be insulted by having to live in a state which honors another religion.
-
Democracy is man's doctrine not God's. It's a way that seems right to men. You can put Christians in it from top to bottom but it will always have a faulty foundation. Jesus said if any man come after me he must first deny himself. That's quite opposite from The Bill of Rights. The Body of Christ has it's own government in the Kingdom on earth as it is in heaven. Jesus is Lord, thats' a Theocracy. In the Kingdom it's about Him. In a democracy it's all about us. He is the cornerstone, not the U.S. Constitution.
-
>Those unable to move to another state would be insulted by having to live in a state which honors another religion.
For example, or two? -
Thomas is exactly right. Any state can establish its own religion and there is nothing in the Constitition to prevent it. However, it might not pass muster under the present state of Supreme Court jurisprudence and in the end that's what controls what we do.
-
-
-
Daniel survived, just sayin'
-
-
Fortunately, many of our state constitutions have even stronger non-establishment clauses than even that of the federal constitution. Also, states would be forbidden to establish an official state church due to the Fourteenth Amendment as well as the First.
-
http://www.wallbuilders.com/LIBissuesArticles.asp?id=123
Wall builders is the best organisation I have seen for adequately explaining this issue.