The Cleveland Plain Dealer, 5/31/05:
http://www.cleveland.com/letters/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/opinion/1117532001135062.xml&coll=2
Drawing the line between churches and politics
Gilbert Cantlin
A member of my church gave to me a copy of the Ohio Restoration
Project.
This project is led by so-called Christians who have a plan for Ohio.
The project will target 2,000 pastors throughout the state to become
"patriot pastors."
These patriot pastors will be briefed on a specific political agenda
and asked to submit names of their parishioners in order to increase a
database to 300,000 names.
These pastors will be asked to place voter guides in their church
pews.
Ken Blackwell, Ohio's secretary of state and a governor hopeful, is
named throughout the document.
Blackwell will be featured on 30-second radio ads promoting this
group's agenda and supporting the "Ohio for Jesus" rally set for the
spring of 2006.
At the end of the document are the words, "America has a mission to
share a living savior with a dying world."
This is not America's mission.
This is frightening, diabolical stuff for non-Christians and
Christians alike.
It is blasphemous to claim that any earthly kingdom is God's kingdom.
The theological foundations of this movement are vacuous.
They are set on the sands of opportunism, self-righteousness and
greed.
It is time for the citizens of Ohio to wake up.
This group and those like it will stop at nothing in making America a
theocracy shaped by one very limited interpretation of scripture.
The media must investigate and show this movement for what it is.
Courageous preachers must help their congregations understand what is
at stake.
Silence is not an option.
___________________________________________________
"I'm completely in favor of the separation of Church and State. My
idea is that these two institutions screw us up enough on their own,
so both of them together is certain death."
- George Carlin
Harry
.
|