By Tim Bloedow
As a Christian, you must find it tiresome and frustrating to have your faith constantly labelled as the root of all evil and hatred by homosexual activists and other secular humanists.
The ECP Centre wants to equip, encourage and motivate Christians to respond to such ignorance and bigotry from misguided and hostile critics. Hopefully the way I handled some recent interview questions will be helpful to you.
This past week I was interviewed by a journalist with The Tyee, an online publication from western Canada. The rationale for the interview was the murder of late-term abortionist George Tiller and the ECP Centre’s posting of an article by Doug Phillips of Vision Forum in response to that incident. The interview, though, covered much more ground than that.
He asked why I selected Doug Phillips’ article, of all the commentary that was published in response to the killing of Tiller. I gave two reasons: 1) He clearly condemned Tiller’s murder as wrong and contrary to Christian ethics but did so in a thoughtful and theological manner, not in a way that sounded reactionary and defensive, and 2) He didn’t shrink back from identifying how evil Tiller’s baby killing industry was even in the face of responding to the man’s own murder.
Perhaps the most important question I had to address in the interview was a response to critics who accuse social conservatives of fuelling the kind of hostility that leads to violence because of our “rhetoric” around abortion.
I have already addressed this issue in a column posted on the ECP Centre’s No Apologies website, but I was very glad to be able to tackle the question for him again.
First, I noted that this is the same kind of criticism we have to face in the controversy surrounding homosexuality and the notion of hate crimes. Secular humanists charge that Christians contribute to violence against homosexuals because of our faithful objections to homosexuality as sinful, harmful and disgusting.
In response, I told this reporter that I can’t find any cases of Christians beating up or murdering homosexuals or damaging their property. No doubt there are one or two cases of professing Christians assaulting a homosexual down through history, but in recent times I can’t find any examples in the media. In God’s providence today’s news carries a report of another incident of assault against homosexuals, in this case in New York state. And yet again, there’s no indication of Christianity being part of the equation.
How many Americans or Canadians who have been in the news in the past two or three years for causing physical harm to homosexuals were also people who attended church every week or sat down regularly to watch a favourite televangelist on TV? I’d venture to say none. I call this the “Fairy Dust” – or “Pixie Dust” – theory of knowledge – the idea that just because a concept is verbalised somewhere in the world, somehow the aura of that concept will float into the minds of people who did not actually hear the message.
Of course that is pure nonsense. But homosexual activists are much more concerned about their feelings of guilt than about physical harm so they would rather get rid of Christians whose message plagues them a guilty conscience than address the source(s) of real physical harm to homosexuals.
But back to the abortion context. My second response the Tyee reporter was that, while Christians strongly reject the notion that there should be a separation of the Christian religion from politics, Christians do believe in the separation of Church and State. I explained to him that this means that we recognize that different institutions in society have their own distinct jurisdictions and responsibilities and, in terms of the question at hand, the State has a responsibility to administer justice that individuals do not possess. Therefore suggestions that it is logical to expect someone who strongly opposes abortion to consider engaging in the murder of an abortionist are not logical at all when it comes to Christians. Christians can use the strongest language to identify abortion as murder without ever committing violence against an abortionist.
As I noted in my response to atheist National Post columnist Colby Cosh, anyone who does not recognize these jurisdictional boundaries between State and Church – and Family – is not fit for leadership in civil government. And, as I suggested, if Cosh’s expression of fuzzy thinking on this front flowed out of his own philosophical framework as an atheist, then this means that atheists (a.k.a. secular humanists) are not fit for public office in a free and democratic society.
I wanted to address this issue again because the National Post reprinted a column from the Slate the very next day after Cosh’s column, which tried to make the very same point. I don’t know if the Post was trying to goad patriotic Canadians into admitting to violent tendencies, but what they really did was demonstrate their ignorance of Christian social and political theory.
This writer from the Slate wrote: “The National Right to Life Committee says it opposes ‘any form of violence to fight the violence of abortion,’ preferring instead ‘to work through educational and legislative activities to ensure the right to life for unborn children, people with disabilities and older people.’ … I applaud these statements. They affirm the value of life and nonviolence, two principles that should unite us. But they don’t square with what these organizations purport to espouse: a strict moral equation between the unborn and the born. If a doctor in Kansas were butchering hundreds of old or disabled people, and legal authorities failed to intervene, I doubt most members of the National Right to Life Committee would stand by waiting for ‘educational and legislative activities’ to stop him. Somebody would use force.”
To reiterate, anybody who does not recognize the legitimate jurisdictional parameters for individual behaviour, and the roles of the Family, the Church and the State in society – and, in that context, the nature and illegitimacy of vigilante behaviour by individuals – is not fit for the role of civil magistrate. Increasingly it seems that secular humanists are joining Mohammedans as people who merge and confuse these categories, and in a way that is dangerous to the liberty and security of both individuals and civilization itself.
As we look ahead, are there really any alternatives for the survival of Canada, other than a new Christendom?
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To reach the ECP Centre, please email us at info@ecpcentre.com or call 613-496-0091.




June 25, 2009
F**K OFF!
June 28, 2009
I assume you live in a part of Canada that’s not only sparsely populated , but hasn’t yet been fully mapped. I have binders full of documanted incidents of violence and murders of homosexual persons who were attacked because the belief system of the perpetrator was deeply rooted in conservative Christian theology , and they admitted to it.
Several years ago PBS aired one of their POV series , about sex offenders incarcerated in California’s prisons designed for such criminals ; like Atascadero. Included in the multiple interviews were about a dozen men who had murdered gay men. Every one of them felt their actions were fully condoned by their religious pursuasion. Some felt they were doing the “work of the lord.”
June 28, 2009
Bart,
What a bunch of idiocy. Do you really think that you made a point worthy of consideration?
Those that have murder in their hearts….murder. This is true for the religious and non-religious alike. Anyone who has a clear understanding of the scriptures and is in control of their thoughts and actions does not murder the homo or the hetero.
After all this time have we not learned that either side can spin a topic to accommodate their beliefs?
It is true that some who call themself ‘Christian’ kill, rape, steal and commit other crimes against man and God. That is an unfortunate fact. I leave their eternal fate in God’s hands. The same is true for others that profess different spiritual beliefs or do not profess one at all.
The ‘Work of the Lord’ can be clearly understood by a reading of the New Testament. It includes an admonishen to seek out HOW to do good to and for your fellow man. To enact a great measure of kindness, peacefulness, compassion, servitude and self-sacrifice. It may even include the giving, not taking, of ones own life while trusting God for the greater good.
A brief investigation into my own community would reveal that without the Christian presence here, the homeless would not get housed or fed and in my subjective, though educated opinion, I am confident that the amount of violence, depression and hopelessness would significantly increase.
Let’s grow up.
June 28, 2009
ps..I would imagine that it is admonition or admonishment…but you get my point.
June 28, 2009
Hugh,
Unfortunately there are a lot of people out there who are mis-informed about what they themselves believe. That is why we have people who claim to be Christians but engage in un-christian acts of violence against others. I believe that you could fill binders with examples of this. But some of the people in these binders would be people like George Tiller who killed children all week and then went to church on Sunday. Or Preists who rape children all week and work in the church at the same time. These examples however, only emphasize the truth. The truth is what God really teaches, and that is what Jesus taught. “Love your neighbor as yourself” “Do good to your enemies” “Do good to those who persecute you”. If people are killing others and fell that they are doing “the work of the lord” then that just doesn’t mean they are right. How come some people only believe the wrong christians?
June 28, 2009
Amen Dave. We Christians sure have our ‘haters’ and they simply and unfortunately do not understand that it is only God who is perfect and we whom are all sinners are given amazing grace (undeserved favour) by this perfect and loving God.
Admittedly, I hate homosexuality. It really disgusts and Gay Pride Parades just remind me why. At the same time I feel no hate for the lost soul who participates in this degrading behaviour.
Love and pray for them we must but at the same time, we must somewhat protect ourselves and our loved ones from those who willfully participate in behaviour that is so destructive.
“Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are they who mourn,
for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek,
for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
for they shall be satisfied.
Blessed are the merciful,
for they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure of heart,
for they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they shall be called children of God.
Blessed are they who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”