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Billy Graham...first religious leader to lie in honor [at Capitol]. Some say he should be the last.
comPost ^ | 3/1/18 | Michelle Boorstein

Posted on 03/02/2018 9:09:48 AM PST by SoFloFreeper

For seven hours Wednesday, the remains of the Rev. Billy Graham lay in honor at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda. Hundreds of people streamed past his coffin, many with tales of how the iconic pastor brought them closer to Jesus Christ. The coffin was to be escorted out of the Capitol Thursday morning for its journey to Charlotte, N.C. for a private funeral Friday.

Wednesday began with a private, televised memorial at the Rotunda, the nation’s three most powerful politicians — House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and President Trump — speaking of Graham’s great gift to America: his evangelism....

....But Graham, who died Feb. 21 at age 99, was of a different era, a different America in which there was even roughly a shared idea of religion....

“I don’t think we’ll ever see anything like this again,” said John Fea, a historian of American religion at Messiah College. “Graham represented the white middle class religious revival of the post-World War II era. He was the embodiment of a mass culture that was largely white and Protestant....

Barbara Perry, director of presidential studies at the Miller Center for presidential and political history at the University of Virginia, said she thinks honoring someone whose primary service was the conversion of people to a certain faith with a Rotunda ceremony violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment....

“Not that he shouldn’t be lauded, but does he deserve to lie in honor in the U.S. Capitol? And once you open that door, where do you stop?” Perry said. “Lying in honor should be someone who served their country. Well, how did he do that?”

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: antichristianbigotry; billygraham; christ; religion; revival; truth
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To: Poison Pill
Over two hundred years of having the most stable government in the world argues that it is not a bad idea.

And yes, we have had pastors on the payroll since the beginning it all.

You want a "purely secular government"? Move to france.

41 posted on 03/02/2018 11:57:33 AM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Bunnies, bunnies, it must be bunnies!! Or maybe midgets....)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
we have had pastors on the payroll since the beginning it all.

We had slavery are the beginning too. Did that make us stable?

You want a "purely secular government"? Move to france.

No need. Religion is in terminal decline. I'll just wait out here.

42 posted on 03/02/2018 12:04:38 PM PST by Poison Pill
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To: Poison Pill
No need. Religion is in terminal decline. I'll just wait out here.

You know what's in "terminal decline?" Look in the mirror.

43 posted on 03/02/2018 12:13:54 PM PST by TTFlyer
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To: TTFlyer
You know what's in "terminal decline?" Look in the mirror.

Everyone's done for in the other guy's theology.

44 posted on 03/02/2018 12:21:59 PM PST by Poison Pill
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To: Verginius Rufus; Dilbert San Diego; Poison Pill; gibsonguy
Maybe we will see the Democrats demanding the same honor be paid to Louis Farrakhan and Jesse Jackson when they die.
When Benjamin Franklin died, and plans were being made to mark his passing, George Washington worried to Thomas Jefferson about having to make such a todo about the passing of every founding father. Jefferson’s reply was (I quote from memory since I can’t seem to find it on the web) to the effect that
“Mankind has set such a gulf between yourself and Doctor Franklin, on the one hand, and the rest of humanity on the other, that what is done for either of you sets no precedent for anyone else whatsoever.”
. . . and you will be hard pressed to name anyone who had the prestige of Billy Graham. Nobody before or since has made the impression he has.

45 posted on 03/02/2018 12:38:41 PM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (Presses can be 'associated,' or presses can be independent. Demand independent presses.)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
you will be hard pressed to name anyone who had the prestige of Billy Graham.

I guess it depends on who's doing the assessing. Among older white protestants he was very prestigious. I don't think he means that much to anyone under 35. I always thought of him as a self promoter and professional White House buttinski.

Nobody before or since has made the impression he has.

I can think of plenty of people who have had a bigger impact on society.

46 posted on 03/02/2018 3:37:22 PM PST by Poison Pill
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To: Poison Pill
Incorrect but so much of what you have said on this thread has been incorrect that one more will do no harm.

The nation of france with it's multitude of revolutions awaits to welcome you with open arms.

47 posted on 03/02/2018 4:11:17 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Bunnies, bunnies, it must be bunnies!! Or maybe midgets....)
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To: SoFloFreeper

Watch — some obscure imam in Dearborn will croak and there will be riots because he is not laid out in the Capitol.

At the University of Pennsylvania last year (not Penn State! UPenn was founded by Ben Franklin before the American Revolution), a bunch of BLMs screamed and removed the portrait of SHAKESPEARE that had been hanging in the ENGLISH DEPARTMENT for a century or more and pressured the dean to hang a portrait of an obscure black lesbian poet no one has ever heard of. Just disgraceful—not so much the ignorant desire of undergraduates, but that the administration caved in.


48 posted on 03/02/2018 4:19:23 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Poison Pill
There is no good reason to have religious leaders laid out in the Capital.


Religious leaders were not laid out in the Capitol.

One man—who was a religious leader, and also a cultural leader, a quasi diplomat, a globally admired spokesman against communism, a celebrity of lifelong personal humility and integrity, and an advisor to every President since Truman—was laid out in the Capitol.

Your comment exemplifies the current media-speak that communizes and collectivizes everything, generalizing outward from one single event as if it is a universal standard applying to all people in a broad general category. Graham was an unique individual and his life was uniquely excellent—another quality that socialism and collectivism rejects completely and finds offensive. Socialists hate excellence.

That is not the vision of the Founders, who believed in individual rights and responsibilities, individual freedoms and private property (including intellectual property), keeping the government out of religion, not the other way around. Thomas Jefferson institued Sunday church services in the Capitol Building for lawmakers. He also, as head of the public schools during his term, directed that the two books every child should have for lessons were the Bible and a hymnal.

How far we have fallen.

49 posted on 03/02/2018 4:52:03 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: V_TWIN
I don’t think it’s at all a coincidence that the Lord waited ‘till the last crew was out of the WH before he called Reverend Graham home. Nope, no sir.

I so totally agree. I was just reflecting on that today, how sad it was for him, after all his months-long trips around the world, to finally be home and retired from traveling, but his beloved wife had died 11 years ago. Being nearly immobilized by illness, yet without her day after day—surrounded by memories of her in the house she had created—must have made him wonder why the Lord was keeping him alive.

You can be sure that the news of his death, had it occured during the past administration, would have been suppressed.

Because he was spared until this year, he is sent off with accolades from public figures, and there is an outpouring of his words over YouTube and television in a way that would not even have been so readily possible eight or ten years ago, due to the increase in computing power and media saturation in the past decade. God's own timing.

50 posted on 03/02/2018 5:05:01 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Albion Wilde
That is not the vision of the Founders

It depends on the Founder. Madison wanted ZERO religion in government. He opposed having chaplains in Congress and the military. I think he would have been opposed to this.

51 posted on 03/02/2018 5:05:36 PM PST by Poison Pill
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To: Poison Pill
We are a secular Republic.

Speak for yourself. Many of us see a much clearer distinction between society and government.

52 posted on 03/02/2018 5:07:34 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Steve_Seattle; SoFloFreeper
I don’t know if Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was ever honored in the rotunda, but if he had died as an old man, he most certainly would have been. He was an ordained minister, just like Billy Graham.

True. And he has a permanent statue on the National Mall, and hundreds of streets, parks and schools named after him thoughout the country.

53 posted on 03/02/2018 5:10:07 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: CrazyIvan
We have a national cathedral in Washington. I think that would have been a more appropriate place.

It's just that the National Cathedral is run by the Episcopal Church USA, which has aggressively promoted gay marriage and would probably have aggressively tried to resist hosting the event, due to Graham's Biblical view of marriage. Episcopalians think the Bible is so last millenium.

January 2013: Washington National Cathedral Announces It Will Hold Same-Sex Weddings

From the National Cathedral's web site:
A longtime supporter of the full inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people in the life of the church, the Cathedral considers LGBT equality the great civil rights issue of church in the 21st century.

54 posted on 03/02/2018 5:17:33 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Albion Wilde
Many of us see a much clearer distinction between society and government.

If you don't see religion in the founding document, then you are seeing something that's not there. We are a secular Republic.

55 posted on 03/02/2018 5:18:52 PM PST by Poison Pill
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
When Benjamin Franklin died, and plans were being made to mark his passing...

I searched for the quote you referenced and could not find it, either. But it does put me in mind of JFK's famous quip in 1962 as he hosted a White House dinner honoring Nobel Prizewinners of the Western Hemisphere:

"I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered together at the White House, with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone."

56 posted on 03/02/2018 5:35:22 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Poison Pill
OK, that was one Founder for your position, and the vast majority of the rest who wrote extensively about thier Christian faith and how they could craft a government that would somehow best enable the practice of Christian values and virtues.

The Founding Fathers on Jesus, Christianity and the Bible

57 posted on 03/02/2018 5:41:54 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Poison Pill

No, we’re not. And you don’t speak for the nation, FRiend.


58 posted on 03/02/2018 5:44:16 PM PST by Albion Wilde (We're even doing the right thing for them. They just don't know it yet. --Donald Trump, CPAC '18)
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To: Albion Wilde

The county where I live is named after him. It was originally named after some long-forgotten politician named King, but they changed it to MLK some years ago.


59 posted on 03/02/2018 8:38:10 PM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: Poison Pill

People claiming false projections, like you, are projecting.


60 posted on 03/02/2018 8:55:59 PM PST by CodeToad (Dr. Spock was an idiot!)
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