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Christian Adoption Agency Nixes Catholics
AP ^ | 07/15/05

Posted on 07/15/2005 11:29:25 AM PDT by nypokerface

JACKSON, Miss. - A Christian adoption agency that receives money from Choose Life license plate fees said it does not place children with Roman Catholic couples because their religion conflicts with the agency's "Statement of Faith."

Bethany Christian Services stated the policy in a letter to a Jackson couple this month, and another Mississippi couple said they were rejected for the same reason last year.

"It has been our understanding that Catholicism does not agree with our Statement of Faith," Bethany director Karen Stewart wrote. "Our practice to not accept applications from Catholics was an effort to be good stewards of an adoptive applicant's time, money and emotional energy."

Sandy and Robert Steadman, who learned of Bethany's decision in a July 8 letter, said their priest told them the faith statement did not conflict with Catholic teaching.

Loria Williams of nearby Ridgeland said she and her husband, Wes, had a similar experience when they started to pursue an adoption in September 2004.

"I can't believe an agency that's nationwide would act like this," Loria Williams said. "There was an agency who was Christian based but wasn't willing to help people across the board."

The agency is based in Grand Rapids, Mich., and has offices in 30 states, including three in Mississippi. Its Web site does not refer to any specific branch of Christianity.

Stewart told the Jackson Clarion-Ledger that the board will review its policy, but she didn't specify which aspects will be addressed.

The Web site says all Bethany staff and adoptive applicants personally agree with the faith statement, which describes belief in the Christian Church and the Scripture.

"As the Savior, Jesus takes away the sins of the world," the statement says in part. "Jesus is the one in whom we are called to put our hope, our only hope for forgiveness of sin and for reconciliation with God and with one another."

Sandy Steadman said she was hurt and disappointed that Bethany received funds from the Choose Life car license plates. "I know of a lot of Catholics who get those tags," she said.

She added: "If it's OK to accept our money, it should be OK to open your home to us as a family."

Bethany is one of 24 adoption and pregnancy counseling centers in Mississippi that receives money from the sale of Choose Life tags, a special plate that motorists can obtain with an extra fee.

Of $244,000 generated by the sale of the tags in 2004, Bethany received $7,053, said Geraldine Gray, treasurer of Choose Life Mississippi, which distributes the money.

"It is troubling to me if they are discriminating based on only the Catholics," Gray said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: adoption; bornagainbigots; dangus; dangusposted391; postedinwrongforum; talibaptists
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To: rwfromkansas

Whenever I ask what religion a person is, a non-Catholic will usually simply say Christian.


If you were to ask me I would answer Anglican.


501 posted on 07/15/2005 5:36:55 PM PDT by kalee
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To: cavanman; Vicomte13; Voir Dire; NYer
From an old history major, here's a short version of the historical basis for anti-Catholicism in the U.S.:

The Puritans ("Pilgrims") who settled the Massachusetts Bay Colony were extremely anti-Catholic (they were also anti-Anglican, but mostly because they perceived the Anglican Church as "too Popish.")

The Presbyterians who settled the mid-Atlantic states were anti-Catholic also, though not quite as much as the Puritans. The Anglicans who settled Virginia were less so (although there was a strong strain of anti-Catholicism in the Anglican church, see Charles Kingsley), and of course Maryland was founded by Catholics so it was a "safe haven".

That was the first round, so to speak. Then when in the 1840s you had heavy immigration from Ireland and to a lesser extent from the Catholic south of Germany, the "Nativist" or "Know-Nothing" movement got its start - "America for Americans". They perceived the massive immigration as a threat to the American way of life, fearing that the Irish would be un-assimilated and take over by sheer numbers (sound familiar?) Because these folks were overwhelmingly Catholic, anti-Catholicism took root in that political movement as well.

Of course the Ku Klux Klan (which was more powerful in the Midwest in the 1920s than it ever was in the South) took over the anti-Catholic line from the Know-Nothings.

The expressed reason for this anti-Catholicism was that Catholics owed a dual allegiance - and that they would put the Pope first ahead of the United States. Kinda conspiratorial, but when you see how deep the roots of this feeling are, it explains it.

502 posted on 07/15/2005 5:38:28 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: AnAmericanMother
The Puritans ("Pilgrims") who settled the Massachusetts Bay Colony were extremely anti-Catholic (they were also anti-Anglican, but mostly because they perceived the Anglican Church as "too Popish.") The Presbyterians who settled the mid-Atlantic states were anti-Catholic also, though not quite as much as the Puritans. The Anglicans who settled Virginia were less so (although there was a strong strain of anti-Catholicism in the Anglican church, see Charles Kingsley), and of course Maryland was founded by Catholics

and the surfers who settled southern California don't give a fat rip about any of this.... hehehe

I think you can dig into history anywhere and find negative feelings about this group or that, but... the only thing that matters is what the Word of God says against what each of these groups believe. That's the bottom line.

503 posted on 07/15/2005 5:45:49 PM PDT by gamarob1
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To: AnAmericanMother
My first ancestor in the U.S. came here in 1695 from England where he was driven by religious persucution from French Catholics after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Was he anti Catholic? I don't know but I do know that I'm not.

I don't need a reason to think that Catholics are my equals in every way but my post #41 is a good enough reason.

504 posted on 07/15/2005 5:46:12 PM PDT by Graybeard58 (Remember and pray for Sgt. Matt Maupin - MIA/POW- Iraq since 04/09/04)
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To: AnAmericanMother

Thanks for the info, AmericanMother.

#44 was also an eye-opening post:

I grew up amidst the vicious anti-Catholicism of some protestants (especially the non-denominationals), the Masons and the KKK. I thank them now for it only made me more resolute in my faith. So it doesn't surprise me at all that this so-called Christian agency has taken this stance.

44 posted on 07/15/2005 2:47:04 PM EDT by Dionysius (ACLU must go)


505 posted on 07/15/2005 5:50:34 PM PDT by Voir Dire
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To: gamarob1
But animosity between particular groups (political or religious) has a significant effect upon history. (You know, that old saw about "those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it". )

When you go back to England, you find that the roots of anti-Catholicism there date back to Henry, Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth. Much of the religious animosity there was ultimately politically based - the result of England's conflicts with Spain and with France.

The point is that much anti-Catholicism (not all of course) is purely reflexive and a mere by-product of political issues long since dead and buried. Much of the supposed Scriptural justification is simply an afterthought.

That's why it's important to know the historical roots of the problem.

506 posted on 07/15/2005 5:53:30 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: AnAmericanMother

Spiritually, it's a different story than historically or politically. Spiritually speaking, there was a spiritual bondage that the catholics put over people, which many wanted to escape (myself included). Though I still respect them as equally God's children, yet I don't want to follow their ways or doctrines. Now if some went too far in their desire to escape, welcome to the human race.


507 posted on 07/15/2005 5:56:35 PM PDT by gamarob1
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To: Graybeard58

I have some French Huguenots on my family tree too. The French naturally made a mess of things, it seems to be a habit of theirs. (We showed them how to do a perfectly good Revolution in 1776, but despite the assistance of Lafayette they managed to foul it up.)


508 posted on 07/15/2005 5:56:58 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: AnAmericanMother
Much of the supposed Scriptural justification is simply an afterthought.

Don't agree with your comment above but I do agree that knowing the history behind Catholic-Protestant rivalry is fascinating.

date back to Henry, Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth

Don't forget Charles I, the Civil War, James II and Bonny Prince Charlie. Fascinating stuff.

509 posted on 07/15/2005 5:57:56 PM PDT by what's up
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To: gamarob1

"For my yoke is easy, and my burthen is light."


510 posted on 07/15/2005 5:58:02 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: evolved_rage

LOL !!!


511 posted on 07/15/2005 5:58:52 PM PDT by investigateworld ( God bless Poland for giving the world JP II & a Protestant bump for his Sainthood!)
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To: what's up
James was a rotten piece of work, his elder brother was a good fellow though. And of course Bonnie Prince Charlie would have done better if he could have stayed sober (and listened to his wiser advisors like Lord George Murray.)

Don't forget Guy Fawkes!


512 posted on 07/15/2005 6:01:26 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: jw777

Interesting thread, 2 things, though.

1) You're a silly person.

2) Were you born this way or did you have to take lessons?


513 posted on 07/15/2005 6:04:50 PM PDT by Sally Golightly
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To: Voir Dire

"You pose very interesting and complex questions.
Since I was born Jewish, and married a Catholic, and am relatively open-minded about religion and the NT and OT, I'm ready for your long version, at your convenience."

I hate to be Socrates and start answering with questions, but let me ask another one.
You were "born Jewish". Now, do you identify being "born Jewish" with Judaism, the religion, or with being ethnically Jewish? You'll probably answer "Both", but that only forces the next question, and it is important: is an atheist a Jew in your mind.

If you renounced Judaism and asserted that you completely disbelieved in God, would you completely cease to be a Jew?
Yes or no.

If the Lubavitcher Rebbe had come out of a long period of prayer and declared Jesus as his Lord and Savior, would he have ceased to be a Jew, according to you.

The answer is important, because Judaism is a religion, but it has attached to it a strong culture. There are Jews who call themselves Jews and think of themselves as Jews, but who are openly expressive atheist. And then there are Jews for whom actual belief in the actual religion is what makes a Jew, although I don't think any of them completely reject the cultural link and blood tie. They might think of the Rebbe (in my hypothetical) as having gone off his rocker, but they would not think that he wasn't Jewish. Even the most religiously centered Jew recognizes an ethnic, cultural component to his religion. To be Jewish is perhaps to have a religion, but it's also to be part of an ethnicity. The ethnicity and culture were FORMED, over the course of 3000-4000 years, by the religion, and the religious practices were the cultural practices that made the Jews distinct. But today, Judaism is an ethnicity, but it is also a self-aware culture.

Thus, even the most devout Jew, while he has contempt for the atheist Jew or the Jew who has converted, still thinks of that person as a lost Jew, and not a Gentile. He's a seduced Jew, but he's still a Jew in some sense.

Christians, Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, Evangelical, Mormon and Jehovah's Witness, would probably all tell you that Christianity was different. Christianity, they would say with greater or lesser degrees of strength, is a belief system, not an ethnicity. (Of course Muslims don't view it this way. They think of Westerners as Christians, but we have enough on our plate talking about Christians so we don't need to talk about Islam here.)

Practically all Christians would aver that if you don't believe a certain set of things (those things vary depend on the sect) you're not a Christian at all. Christianity is not a matter of birth, like Judaism is, but belief.

Now, all Christians believe that philosophically, but it is not really true. Catholicism and Orthodoxy (which actually between them comprise 90% of the world's Christians) are religions so ancient that, like Judaism, they really are cultures. Actually, if you trace history carefully enough, you'll discover that the whole transformation of the West, and the East, from what were once the Roman and Hellenic worlds came about through the prism of the Catholic Church (pre-Schism, Eastern Orthodox and Western Catholics all considered their church to be one Catholic and Apostolic Church).

If one looks hard at history, one actually discovers that Orthodox and Catholic Christianity (united until the 1000s as original Catholicism, although each having its regional practices, East and West, which continue to this day) and Rabbinnical Judaism all date from the First Century AD. The origin or Catholic Christianity (Orthodox and Catholic) lies in unbroken chain from the life of Jesus and the Apostles to today. The origin of Rabbinnical Judaism lies in the destruction of the Temple and the end of the Jewish priesthood with the sack of Jerusalem by the Romans in 69 AD.
So, at least as far as the structure of religions go, Rabbinnical Judaism and Catholicism/Orthodoxy are all children of the First Century.

If one digs deeper into the cultural aspects of Judaism, one discovers that an awful lot of what is considered truly ethnically Jewish in America and the West is really the Ashkenaz culture of the stetl. It's really a Germanic/Slavic culture melded into Jewish families and religion.

Now, this is just as true of Orthodoxy, which is the Hellenic Greek culture of the ancient East melded into Christian religion, and Catholicism, which is the Latin Roman culture of the ancient West melded into the same Christian religion.

Doctrinally, the differences between Orthodoxy and Catholicism can be reduced to a couple of sentences, and serious theologians of both camps, including Popes and Patriarchs, think that there is no fatal theological difference separating the true. But the "feel" of these Churches is very, very different. If you go to some of their services and contemplate the history, the liturgy, what traditionally was done and still is, you will discover that the closest thing to the truth is that the Orthodox are Greek or Russian Catholics, and the Catholics are Latin Orthodox. And it was really always that way from the beginning. Theology united those disparate peoples for over a millennium, and still does, really (although the most theologically bigoted might yell at you that it's not so!), but culture, including the "phromena" of the two Churches...this is what separates them.

For the most part, Catholics and Orthodox respect each other. Religiously, they each know that the other is basically catholic (in the old sense of the word) and Christian. They do not accuse each other of heresy (at least not anymore). There is theological disagreement, but you'll never hear Catholics or the Orthodox suggesting that the other is anything but Christian in the true sense.
Listen closely, and you will hear the Catholics saying "Come back to Rome", and you will hear the Orthodox saying "Come back to the original Church", and each will actually be right within his cultural context.

The Orthodox will acknowledge their Greekness and Russianness (or other Eastern ethnic group) quite explicitly. For a long time, to be Greek was to be Orthodox, and to be Orthodox was to be Greek or Russian. There is a close parallel with "Jewishness" here.

In the West, Latin Rome was so universal that it essentially MADE the West, and to be a Christian was to be a Catholic and live in "Christendom". The culture and the religion were inseparably intertwined.

But because of the proselytizing and universalist nature of the Christian religion, the cultural aspect - especially in the West with its huge bands of unassimilated tribes in the early centuries (and still today the polyglot of cultures is the hallmark of Europe) -was not as strong as the religious philosophy aspect.

Orthodoxy is very close to Judaism both in geographical origin and in the interweave between culture and religion.
Catholicism is close to Orthodoxy, but when Catholicism was getting its start the only civilized culture in Europe was decayed Rome, and it was really the Catholic Church that civilized the West, gave it literacy and law, etc., beyond the boundaries of France, Italy and Spain anyway.

So the philosophical religion aspect was stronger in the West, and cultures were brought into the Church yet untamed, but changed into Westerners by the Catholic Church. It's not quite the same obvious tie between religion and culture as exists with the Orthodox or especially the Jews. Indeed, were one to speak of himself as ethnically "Catholic", it would be idiosyncratic. But it would not be untrue.

For Judaism is imparted by birth, but Catholicism and Orthodoxy come very close to that through the practice of infant baptism. When one thinks of Catholics, it is appropriate to think of Italian mamas and Irish ladies with their hair shawls. It's appropriate to think of Spanish Conquistadores, and Frankish Crusaders, and all of that. There is a religion, and the religion is the culture. Not so pervasively as the Jews or Orthodox, but still there. Countries have patron saints. Joan of Arc is believed to have heard voices through which God saved the Kingdom of France (from the no-less-Catholic English).
The cultural element of Catholicism is not explicitly stated, and would be objectionable philosophically to some, but it is nevertheless real.

And so in Orthodoxy and Catholicism, you have two closely akin ancient religions that are chiefly passed along by birth and culturally through growing up in families that are that. If one had to point out the theological emphases, I might say that Orthodoxy is the Christianity of Easter, while Roman Catholicism is the Christianity of Christmas. I don't think that too many Catholics or Orthodox would disagree with me too strongly on that.

This makes them radically different, culturally speaking, from Protestantism.

Now, a political reality intrudes: the Protestant Churches, the original ones, all broke off from the Catholic Church in the 1500s, and they did so in the context of considerable war and violence in all directions.

So, just as Jews have an historical memory of persecution by Christians, and therefore a particular aversion to Christianity arising from that, the history of civil war among Western Christians has left a bitterness between Protestants and Catholics that does not exist in anything like the same intensity between Catholics and the Orthodox (although the Orthodox do remember, resentfully, the sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders in the early 1200s).

Culturally, the ancient Roman Empire is almost entirely Catholic, and the Germanic part of Europe is divided between Catholics, in the southern part, and Protestants in the northern. The past century has added the phenomenon of a large number - perhaps the majority - of secularists and atheists more concentrated in the Germanic countries, and more concentrated in the Protestant half.

We've already seen that Catholicism is a culture, a quasi ethnicity in addition to being a religion. Tradition is as important to Catholics as it is to Jews.

Protestantism completely rejects that.
Indeed, it cites passages from the Bible - written in the context of the early Christians' persecution at the hands of the Jews of the time - that excoriate tradition as often leading men astray. Jesus, of course, was talking about the Pharisees, but those same words were picked up by the Protestants and aimed directly at Catholicism itself, that vast culture and tradition-based edifice, back in the Reformation.

Now, Protestantism started out as a philosophical movement par excellence. Of course it ended up fragmented, in Europe, into ethnic state Churches, but no value is placed on ethnic traditions at all in the Protestant concept (although nationalism is encouraged...or was anyway...by the state churches of old). There are many broad bands of Protestantism, ranging from traditionalist Anglican, which is practically Catholic in most of its practices (and calls itself catholic) to the modern evangelicals. What they have in common is a rejection of the traditional aspects of Catholicism in particular (Orthodoxy is even more traditional, but there is no history of warfare and feud between the Orthodox and the Protestants, therefore you won't find Protestants asserting the Orthodox are not "Christian", although Orthodox practice includes all of the traditions of the "Whore of Babylon" that some Protestant firebrands have attacked over the course of history - and moreso.

The Protestant Catholic divide works on a lot of levels: philosophical, theological and ethnic. Protestantism very much philosophically downplays the ethnic traditional element (with exceptions), and the most evangelical modern Protestants see in Catholic traditions and practices that vary from their own things (such as statuary, the veneration of saints, prayers to the Virgin Mary, the authority of the Pope, confession, the unmarried priesthood, and all the rules) as being Pharisaic or positively idolatrous.

And THOSE are the people who would say that Catholics are not Christians at all, because their practices are idolatrous (in their eyes).

There's more, but I'm sure you've had enough for now.


514 posted on 07/15/2005 6:04:59 PM PDT by Vicomte13 (Et alors?)
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To: AnAmericanMother
"For my yoke is easy, and my burthen is light."

True, and I've experienced both in great detail apart from catholicism, as have millions... Not to bash catholics, but again, I think there's just as much reverse bashing that goes on from people constantly pushing people to "return to the mother church". There is no "mother church", there is however, Jesus, my best Friend. :)

515 posted on 07/15/2005 6:05:31 PM PDT by gamarob1
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To: GoLightly
"Determination about whether or not another is saved is beyond our reach. It is not our place to even try to determine that, for that is within God's power, not man's. "

Orthodox have a saying "We know where the church is, but we do not know where it is not". Just as the thief on the cross was saved, it is possible to be saved when not in communion, but one should not place their hope on living that kind of life; in essence testing God. Instead one should live a Christian life as best as possible with the hope that Christ will save them from sins committed in weakness.

"Excommunication is not about excluding people. It is an instructional action, to get the individual to repent & to return to the fold."

To be technically correct, excommunication means to be "out of communion" or "put out of communion". If you think about it, what is the end result of any schism but to be out of communion with one another. I find it hard to believe that when two believers cannot make peace with each other and heal their schism that they are in communion with Christ.

"If therefore your are presenting your offering at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, Leave your offering there before the altar, and go your way; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and present your offering." Matt 5:23-24

We all remember the Lords prayer, but how many of us remember His warning at the end...very few!

"Our Father who art in heaven,...For if you forgive men for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions" Matt 6:9-15

516 posted on 07/15/2005 6:07:52 PM PDT by AMHN
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To: Voir Dire; cavanman; GipperGal; sandyeggo; Mrs. Don-o
I'm a Jew, and consider Catholics to be Christian. A specific form of Christianity, but Christian nonetheless. Can someone explain why they are viewed as different

Thank you for your post! Catholics are Christians ... period. The Church began in the East. Our Lord lived and died and resurrected in the Holy Land. The Church spread from Jerusalem throughout the known world. As the Church spread, it encountered different cultures and adapted, retaining from each culture what was consistent with the Gospel.

Many people forget - or do not realize - that Christianity came from Judaism. As the church expanded beyond the realm of Judaism, it adapted itself to the people and cultures in which it took root. This cultural adaptation resulted in the 22 different rites of the Catholic Church today.

It is from Jewish roots that the church of Antioch sprung. In fact, the church of Antioch was founded by St. Peter and it was there that the terms "Christian" and "Catholic" were first used. The first Christians were Jews and entire communities came to accept Jesus as the Messiah. Evidence from archaeological studies of Maronite church buildings show that they had earlier been synagogues.

Can someone explain why they are viewed as different (is it just the praying to Mary- there must be something more) and why it was such a big thing that prior to JFK there was not a Catholic POTUS?

These are two separate questions. The first one is the bigger question. Consider the divisions in the Jewish faith. There are those who cling to the fundamentals of the faith and others who have 'relaxed' the Kosher regulations as handed down to Moses and the Israelites.

For ALL christians, Jesus is the fulfillment of the prophecy of a Messiah, made by God to the Israelites. That is simple enough. However, over its 2000 year history, certain elements in the One, Holy, Catholic Church founded by Jesus Christ, have disagreed. As a result, breeches formed. During the Middle Ages, Martin Luther posted his disagreements on the doors of a German cathedral and the Protestant Reformation began. Meanwhile, the Church founded by Jesus Christ held its ground. This 'breech' has resulted in more than 30,000 different christian denominations. Meanwhile, the Church founded by Christ continues on its path of trying to reconcile with all those who have separated themselves from Peter, to whom Jesus entrusted His church.

why it was such a big thing that prior to JFK there was not a Catholic POTUS?

Now you've hit the ball way out into left field. Here are the present Jewish senators:

1. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif). 2. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif). 3. Norm Coleman (R.Minn). 4. Russel Feingold (D.Wisc). 5. Herb Kohl (D-Wisc.) 6. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J). 7. Carl Levin (D-Mich). 8. Joseph Lieberman (D-Con.) 9. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) 10. Alsen Spector (R-Pa) 11. Ron Wyden (D-Ore).

Which one of these stands out as exemplifying the traditions of the Jewish faith? This is true of John Kennedy, John Kerry, and all the other CINOs who profess a certain faith but betray the word of God for personal political gain.

517 posted on 07/15/2005 6:08:44 PM PDT by NYer ("Each person is meant to exist. Each person is God's own idea." - Pope Benedict XVI)
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Comment #518 Removed by Moderator

To: Graybeard58

>>Here's one.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ZOT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Now, go do the laundry.<<

Ouch. :-)


519 posted on 07/15/2005 6:13:22 PM PDT by netmilsmom (There was no sign of a pile of gnawed hearts.....)
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To: Vicomte13

Thanks. Very perceptive analysis.


520 posted on 07/15/2005 6:14:55 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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