Thursday, April 3, 2014

Separation of Church and State Continued!

Since my research, I have worked on another document to get this started. So, here it is!

The Wall of Separation between Church and State Defined
            Few people realize how far the tentacles from religious gatherings can intrude on our society. In the United States, the first record of definition for “separation of church and state” lies in Thomas Jefferson’s letter to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802. It states: “Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions … should ‘make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’ thus building a wall of separation between Church and State.” Yet even though we are not to make laws to help or hinder any religious gathering, some of the definitions of help have been warped to different meanings. For a few simple examples, churches are exempt from paying taxes (which if they were to pay, it would solve many matters of debt and poverty alone), those who attend a church and pay tithe (money to the “work of God”) receive a tax benefit, and some religious gathering end up poisoning politics, bringing in emotion rather than intellect.
            With Churches and gatherings receiving many “free passes” from the government, it’s hard to see where the wall of separation stands. In fact, the wall that is meant to separate religion from power has become more of a bridge. And to make matters worse, laws that the churches approve of are passed with ease, whereas the laws that are not in agreement with how they teach are challenged profusely. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that there is some form of bias between this wall, where the power that was meant to be withheld from church is now being held against government. I would like to state that I am a Christian, and worship my God. However through my short amount of experience, I have already found that religion can cause more harm than it claims to help.
            In order to fix this dilemma and even out the scales, I propose for there to be a strict law in what can and cannot be done. By having this law passed, there would be little to no room for confusion or persuasion in what the government and church can or cannot do. Within this law, I propose for churches to be stripped from all their tax benefits, and instead have to pay tax as any organization would, and its members would pay tithe out of kindness, rather than expecting to get a tax cut through “giving to their God”. I would also like to enforce a clear boundary between politics and religious power, although this may be the hardest aspect of the proposal. By setting a boundary, politics could then stick to fact and reason, rather than emotion and religious belief (which in all sense, could be complete fiction).

I believe that religion has its place, and government is not it. I also believe that government has its place, and religion is not it. Therefore I propose to finalize and strengthen this wall between Church and State, not for personal reasoning, but to ensure the survival of free speech, uniqueness, and law.

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