Gideon Bible distribution in southern Ontario has generated some newspaper coverage in recent weeks. Illustrative of the totalitarian arrogance of humanism is a recent commentary by Abby Deshman is project director for the Canadian Civil Liberties Association in Toronto, published Saturday in the Waterloo Region Record.
Early in her commentary he illustrates her humanist arrogance or illiteracy by writing: “Despite the fact that many Canadians are Christians, our government is not. We are a democracy, bound by the rule of law and the Charter of Rights and Freedom’s guarantees of equality, freedom of conscience and freedom of religion. The value of multiculturalism also gets specific mention. These principles protect our freedom to hold, profess and manifest religious beliefs; ensure that religious minorities are free from state coercion; guarantee that government institutions are open to all; and prohibit discrimination. They also mandate that the government be neutral with respect to religion.”
Note her final comment in that quote: “the government be neutral with respect to religion.” Civil government cannot be neutral respecting religion even if some fool mandated it to be so. Everything a civil government does is ethical in nature, and those ethics come from a worldview or religion. Sadly, even many suicidal Christians have come to believe in the possibility of the state being religiously neutral.
Ms. Deshman also writes as a statement of contrast with the notion of Canada having a Christian government that “We are a democracy, bound by the rule of law and the Charter of Rights and Freedom’s guarantees of equality, freedom of conscience and freedom of religion.”
Too bad Ms. Deshman is historically illiterate. Christianity has done more than any other worldview to advance principles such as the rule of law and freedoms of conscience and religion. It seems humanists don’t have to think because they have memorized the empty, often dishonest, “clever” mantras that robotic journalists repeat without question. If humanism was true, it would be rooted in reality and facts, not childish mythology.
It would be very unfortunate if childish mythology trumped civic responsibility in a decision to ban Bible distribution from more Ontario schools.



