To: Jorge
Jorge, are you an alumnus of the College of William and Mary?
Do you have any idea of the history of that building?
IF you have ever set foot inside the chapel at the Wren building (homecoming is this weekend by the way) you would see that it is unmistakeably a Protestant church. They still have , periodically, Christian church services in it. But this is all moot anyway. The real argument is about the College's decision to remove a Christian symbol under the guise of not offending other religions.
Sr. Christopher Wren, for whom the building is named, was a famous architect of Christian cathedrals -- St. Paul's if I recall correctly. The College of William and Mary in Virginia (commissioned by King William Stuart) was most decidedly a Church-of-England-based institution at the time. ALL OVER the oldest buildings on campus and in Williamsburg there are Christian symbols and references.
Would you support removing the Star of David from an ancient synagogue in the Middle East just so Arabs would "not be offended"? Perhaps you would. The problem here is that so much of the world suddenly finds Christian symbols and the faith itself 'offensive', when in reality it is just folks being intolerant bigots against Christianity.
No genuine Christian cares if a synagogue has the star of David, or a mosque has the Koran etc etc. Why must a historical church (called a chapel cuz it's small) have it's Christian symbols removed so that people of other faiths won't take offense? (REM: when you are in the W&M chapel, it's architecture is OBVIOUSLY that of a colonial-period church. must they also change the architecture so as not to offend??) The presence of another religion does NOT preclude you from practicing your own, unless you choose to make it an issue.
harrumph
49 posted on
10/26/2006 8:06:20 PM PDT by
Blueflag
(Res ipsa loquitor)
To: Blueflag
Leave the poor man alone. It's obvious it's just another room on and old college campus
;-)
54 posted on
10/26/2006 9:14:48 PM PDT by
VeniVidiVici
(In God we trust. All others we monitor.)
To: Blueflag
I hear all you're saying but when all is said and done it is still just a building.
If the owners decide to convert it into a non-denominational cross-faith place of worship, they can do so.
69 posted on
10/27/2006 5:41:43 PM PDT by
Jorge
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