James 1:26 New International Version (NIV)
Those who consider themselves religious and yet do not keep a tight
rein on their tongues deceive themselves, and their religion is
worthless.
I
started out as a Baptist, as I've said before, and I was a
conservative. Oh yes, I was. Not on every issue of course, as a
teenager I was not allowed to leave the house without condoms. But
then that was part and parcel of constantly having it hammered into
my brain that I needed a thousand dollars a month just to live as an adult, and I
shouldn't have any kids until I could afford to support them, and I
should pay my bills, etc. etc. etc. So, conservatism in my family
wasn't all about politics or rama rama ding ding religious crap. It
was about paying your bills and eating your vegetables and gun safety
and making damned well sure you knew what you were doing before you
did something because that's what conservatives DO. It was also about history and science and theology, it
was about seeking after the answer to “What is truth?” Not just
knowing what you
believed, but why you
believed it...and then acting
in accordance with
those beliefs.
Honestly,
I was taught that God would not accept anything less. It is not
enough to Believe because one is told to believe in God, in Jesus, or
in one's Church community. One has to know what they're doing
and do it because they want to.
By
the time I was old enough to start school my family attended a
(Northern) Baptist church, and when I started school it was the
Church school associated with that church, Highland Hills Baptist
church in Highland, Michigan...and of course, Highland Hills Baptist
School. The school itself was located within sight of the mobile home
park I lived in with my parents, down the hill and across a field.
In
moving several times after my Dad died, I attended several different
churches, also switched denominations a couple of times (first
Lutheran, then Catholic, then an independent Baptist church.)
All the churches I attended, every single one, frowned upon if not
outright forbade the use of profanity. To this day, I do not
associate the excessive use of foul language with a person being an
observant Christian. It simply does not compute. Oh, Christians swear
of course...even occasionally in an official capacity I have heard
such. But...usually when a person who is a devout Christian (of any
denomination, by the way) swears it's either damned well been fired
for effect, an indicator of great distress, or a show of anger which
(in my experience anyway) is rarely misdirected. Life has since shown
me that observant Buddhists, Jews and Muslims are much the same.
Profanity is not something I associate with Believers. Now, of
course, there's also those cultural Christians and the
nominally-religious of other faiths who might swear all the time, or
there are those (whatever level of their devoutness) who serve in the
military or work in occupations that are conducive to foul language
and there is nothing wrong with that. As long as it's for a purpose,
I don't have a problem with whatever someone does. (Most of the time)
It's not for me to say.
I've
been known to swear like a Sailor myself on occasion, and that too,
is something I learned from my Grandfather, He was a Navy retiree. I
could tell you about the time we were working on installing a new
floor in the home of a lady who was a Jehovah's Witness, back when
those “easy to install” tongue-and-groove wood floors were new
and gimmicky...and we accidentally taught the lady's new young
African Gray Parrot to curse...but that is another (and very funny)
story.
All
that said, It's not my place to judge what anyone does or say
anything about it at all. That's another aspect of the conservatism
that I was taught...Mind Your Own Business. Don't judge others, it is
not on you to police
the Universe. One of the customers my Grandpa had in his
landscaping/lawn care/odd jobs business in the late 1980's and early
1990's was a gay man who was dying of AIDS. We didn't care that he
was gay, we cared that his grass got cut, his snow got plowed and the
check his Mama sent us every month cleared the bank.
Now,
all that said, I want you to look at the picture posted at the
beginning of this article and I want you to think about it. The
person claims to be Catholic; When I was first learning about the
Word as a young boy in the Baptist school I always got told to check
everything! Check everything that somebody says against the Bible,
against facts, against history, and against their own conduct.
Why?
Because that is how you don't
fall for Deceivers and Ear-tickling False Prophets.
In
any church that I ever
attended, a person who pulled up with their vehicle all decked out
with flags and profanity and a homophobic slur would either have been
asked, or more often outright told,
to leave. I was always taught that when you go to a church (or for
that matter, a Mosque or a Temple or indeed any religious house of
worship or holy place) it's not Your House. Conduct oneself with
reverence and sobriety, step softly, be serious (Somewhat
of an exemption on that one for Praise and Worship in Evangelical and
Pentecostal churches I've attended a time or two, but it usually
holds.) One simply does not show up to Church acting like that,
dressing like that, or for that matter driving a vehicle that says
such things painted on the side. It's not all about you, when you're
there, you know? As I was taught, such things present a bad witness
for Christ. As a Baptist, I was taught to avoid even the appearance
of evil. Even though I'm not a Baptist or even anything more than the
most Agnostic sort of Christian, that is still what I was taught and
it's ingrained in me.
Or,
to put it another way; As my Grandpa Thompson also used to say “Some
things are not done in the better places.”
Didn't
matter where it was,
it was a very bad idea to argue with him if he said that. My Grandpa
didn't have time or tolerance for bullshit, and his background
demanded he not suffer fools gladly. As far as I'm concerned, the
rest of us shouldn't, either.
It should go without saying, that a Christian person shouldn't put stuff like that on their car. Just as the Church is not Your house it's not Your Earth either. You as a Believer represent Jesus to the eyes of the unbelievers, act accordingly.
...And maybe it's just me, but "Stronger Together" and "United We Stand" seem to be pretty Biblical concepts, just as a rule.
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