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John Locke on Religious Tolerance

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Locke said tolerance was the chief characteristic of the true Christian.

Jon Miltimore | June 14, 2016

John Locke (1632-1704) was one of the most influential thinkers of the Enlightenment. The English philosopher’s ideas are at the core of the American Founding; in fact, it can be argued that his thoughts shaped the minds of the American Revolution more than any single thinker.

While Locke is best known for his treatises on government, he also wrote on religion.

Locke was a Christian who grew up during the Thirty Years War (1638-1648), one of the most destructive conflicts in Europe’s bloody history. The war was largely a religious conflict, the product of the Protestation Reformation that divided European states into more than a thousand Protestant and Catholic states.

The conflict no doubt shaped Locke’s views and Christian philosophy.

A deeply religious man, Locke made the case for religious tolerance in a famous letter he wrote in 1689 titled “A Letter Concerning Toleration.”

“Since you are pleased to inquire what are my thoughts about the mutual toleration of Christians in their different professions of religion, I must needs answer you freely that I esteem that toleration to be the chief characteristic mark of the true Church.”

Locke said Christian tolerance (“charity, meekness, and good-will in general”) should be extended to all people, not just fellow Christians, and those who fail in this regard fall “short of being a true Christian himself.”

By what authority does he draw on to make this claim? The New Testament.

“If the Gospel and the apostles may be credited, no man can be a Christian without charity and without that faith which works, not by force, but by love.”

Locke closed his essay by stating that Christians seeking to advance the Christian Church through “arms that do not belong to the Christian warfare.”

https://www.intellectualtakeout.org/blog/john-locke-religious-tolerance

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Bruce Jenner Comes Out as a ‘Conservative Republican’ and ‘Christian’

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April 25,2015
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Shock and dismay as Bruce Jenner Comes Out as a ‘Conservative Republican’ and ‘Christian’

In an interview with Diane Sawyer on ABC Friday, Bruce Jenner said he is transgender, and more shockingly a Republican. and not just a any Republican  a Conservative Republican .  He even went as far as to say he was a Christian. “This is why God put me on this earth… to deal with this issue.” Sawyyer was stunned .

“Are you a Republican?” Sawyer asked. Jenner Replied “Yeah, is that a bad thing?” Jenner replied. “I believe in the Constitution.”, clearly another strike against him .

Jenner was immediately  blasted on line by open minded  ” Liberals” , ” Frankly we thought Diane Sawyer’s head was going to explode.

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The Christian Heart of American Exceptionalism

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The Christian Heart of American Exceptionalism

Democrats should take note: Religious belief is strong in the U.S., and it cuts across party lines.

By
WILLIAM A. GALSTON
Dec. 30, 2014 6:57 p.m. ET

In this year-end holiday season, it is timely to reflect on American exceptionalism. Although this phrase is much abused in partisan polemics, it should not be discarded. The United States does continue to differ from most other developed democratic countries. And the heart of that difference is religion. The durability of American religious belief refutes the once-canonical thesis that modernization and secularization necessarily go hand in hand.

This is all the more remarkable because our Founders drafted a deliberately secular constitution. In 20 quietly revolutionary words, Article VI declares that “[N]o religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.” Consistent with that prohibition, newly elected officials—from the president on down—may choose either to “swear” (that is, to take a religious oath) or simply to “affirm” their loyalty to the Constitution.

In 1789, this secular national constitution perched uneasily atop a Christian population residing in states the majority of which had established an official religion. These establishments have disappeared. But despite the enormous growth in the nation’s diversity over the past 225 years, Christian conviction remains pervasive.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/william-a-galston-the-christian-heart-of-american-exceptionalism-1419983828