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Keyword: 10commandments

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  • RETIRED FORD EXECUTIVE SPEAKS OUT ON GOD'S 10 COMMANDMENTS

    12/03/2006 12:05:52 PM PST · by carolgr · 9 replies · 424+ views
    THE AMERICAN CONSERVATIVE WORKER ^ | 12-01-2006 | Michael Westfall
    For several years I worked directly with the chairman and president on management culture change with Employee Involvement process. The Ten Commandments were of immense importance to our forefathers when forming of our Nation. They viewed them as commands for personal living and the formation of a government. Unfortunately over the years, due to attacks by organizations like the ACLU and opposition from a liberal judicial system they have become a non-factor and we are paying the price with declining morality and decency in our nation. There is a common thought that the Old Testament does not apply today. Jesus...
  • The Berean Daily Verse (The Sabbath)

    08/25/2006 6:20:28 AM PDT · by kerryusama04 · 21 replies · 341+ views
    The Berean Daily Verse ^ | 8/25/2006 | John W. Ritenbaugh
    Genesis 2:2-3 (2) And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made; and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had made. (3) And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from all his work which God created and made. Go to this verse on Bible Tools This generation has a particularly difficult time adjusting from a workday mode to a Sabbath-keeping mode for a number of reasons. One is that life is so fast paced, with so many ways and activities...
  • Judge: Okla. 10 Commandments monument OK

    08/19/2006 12:05:14 PM PDT · by SandRat · 23 replies · 712+ views
    A federal judge on Friday said a Ten Commandments monument outside a courthouse can stay, rejecting arguments that it promotes Christianity at the expense of other religions. U.S. District Judge Ronald A. White in Muskogee, Okla., ruled that Haskell County did not violate the Constitution by erecting the monument. The county did not "overstep the constitutional line demarcating government neutrality toward religion," he wrote.
  • Verdict Reached in Andrea Yates Case (UPDATE: Not Guilty by reason of insanity)

    07/26/2006 9:35:01 AM PDT · by cajunman · 693 replies · 18,983+ views
    HOUSTON -- Jurors reached a verdict in Andrea Yates' murder retrial Wednesday morning. The jury's decision will be announced at about 11:25 a.m. KPRC and Click2Houston will air the verdict live. After deliberating nearly 11 hours, jurors returned for a third day Wednesday to determine if she was legally insane when she drowned her five children in the bathtub. Before court ended Tuesday, the jury of six men and six women asked to review the state's definition of insanity: that someone, because of a severe mental illness, does not know a crime he is committing is wrong. State District Judge...
  • Academic Evangelicals

    07/06/2006 12:38:50 PM PDT · by JSedreporter · 6 replies · 564+ views
    Accuracy in Academia ^ | July 5, 2006 | Malcolm A. Kline
    When academics relay their understanding of religion to the rest of us, they offer interpretations that the religiously observant may find a tad bizarre. “Religion has a certain kind of legitimacy among many people and in many parts of the world that secular life simply doesn’t have,” philosophy professor Roger S. Gottlieb explained in an interview with Jennifer Howard that appeared in the June 23rd issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education. “In Madagascar, where the fishermen were dynamiting to get fish and destroying the coral reef and fish stock, when the government said, ‘Don’t do it,’ they kept doing...
  • Another Legal Study

    07/06/2006 12:36:33 PM PDT · by JSedreporter · 2 replies · 175+ views
    Accuracy in Academia ^ | July 5, 2006 | Trevor Hayes
    Giving a talk not likely to be heard in many law schools, a lawyer stood before the podium asking college students to pray with him. Mike Johnson of the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) spoke to the Eagle Collegians Forum Leadership Summit (EFC) about legally upholding Christian morality. “The phrase Christian lawyer is not an oxymoron,” Johnson told EFC. As an ADF lawyer, Johnson fights for conservative values in court. He provides a service for conservatives that the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has been providing for years for liberals. Johnson moves across the country, standing in for the right, which...
  • Judge Roy Moore, GOP Candidate AL governor speaking Jan 16. Y'all come

    01/15/2006 9:41:14 PM PST · by Full Court · 42 replies · 1,743+ views
    estern Area Republican Club of Jefferson County, Alabama ******Judge Roy Moore to be our next speaker ****** Candidate for the Republican nomination for governor, the Honorable Roy Moore, will be our speaker at our January 16th, 2006 meeting at 11:30 A.M., at the Home Plate Diner, 2780 Allison-Bonnett Memorial Drive in Hueytown. Visitors are welcome, and no reservations are needed. This is an opportunity to meet and hear Judge Moore, and to buy the book "So Help Me God" and have it autographed for you. There will be no other form of fund-raising at this meeting.We will have an...
  • Court of Appeals: Constitution "does not demand a wall of separation between church and state."

    12/21/2005 1:12:17 PM PST · by AFA-Michigan · 331 replies · 8,938+ views
    American Family Association of Michigan ^ | December 21, 2005 | American Family Association of Michigan
    Values group hails unanimous decision Tuesday CINCINNATI -- In an astounding return to judicial interpretation of the actual text of the United States Constitution, a unanimous panel of the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals Tuesday issued an historic decision declaring that "the First Amendment does not demand a wall of separation between church and state." In upholding a Kentucky county's right to display the Ten Commandments, the panel called the American Civil Liberties Union's repeated claims to the contrary "extra-constitutional" and "tiresome." See Cincinnat Enquirer at: http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051221/NEWS01/512210356/1056 See U.S. Court of Appeals decision, page 13: http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/05a0477p-06.pdf "Patriotic Americans should...
  • Commandments Draw 300 to Okla. Courthouse

    11/20/2005 11:10:16 AM PST · by ncountylee · 21 replies · 651+ views
    AP via TBO ^ | November 20, 2005
    TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- A group of pastors fired up a crowd of more than 300 people during a rally around a monument engraved with the Ten Commandments on the Haskell County Courthouse lawn. U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn spoke Saturday at the gathering in favor of the monument, which a recent American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit says is a sign of the government favoring one religion over another. But Coburn and others who were vocal at the rally contend that the statements listed in the Ten Commandments are guidelines to a moral, law-abiding society regardless of religious beliefs. "I wish...
  • The Liberal Ten Commandments

    09/06/2005 12:07:38 PM PDT · by Keyes2000mt · 14 replies · 1,442+ views
    Renew America ^ | 09/04/2005 | Adam Graham
    When Robert F. Kennedy wrote that God punished Mississippi with Hurricane Katrina for electing former lobbyist Haley Barbour as governor, I realized that its not that liberals don't believe in God or morality, but rather that they have an entirely different viewpoint of morality. They even have their own Ten Commandments which are posted below. I. Thou Shalt Have no other gods before the environment. II. Thou Shalt Not make to thee any image or likeness of scripture or anything that references or alludes to God and post it a public place. III. Thou Shalt not take the name of...
  • Pin camera ready to roll on Ark of Covenant discovery

    06/29/2005 3:10:31 PM PDT · by MikeEdwards · 42 replies · 1,844+ views
    Canada Free Press ^ | June 28, 2005 | Judi McLeod
    Mark August 14, 2005 on your calendar as potentially momentous. It’s one day before Ariel Sharon’s planned removal of 8,000 settlers from the Gaza strip, a dramatic event no matter the outcome.
  • Hairsplitting at the Court - (what a relief! Sage George Will on historical religion/state concepts)

    06/27/2005 11:59:51 PM PDT · by CHARLITE · 18 replies · 806+ views
    TOWNHALL.COM ^ | JUNE 28, 2005 | GEORGE WILL
    <p>WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Monday rendered two more hairsplitting, migraine-inducing decisions about when religious displays on public property do and do not violate the First Amendment protection against ``establishment'' of religion. In a case from Texas, where a Ten Commandments monument stands outside the state Capitol, the court, splintered six ways from Sunday, said: We find no constitutional violation. The second case came from Kentucky, where the Commandments displayed in several courthouses are surrounded by historical symbols and documents -- e.g., copies of the Mayflower Compact, the Declaration of Independence, the Star Spangled Banner -- to comply with the ``reindeer rule,'' more about which anon. On Monday the court recoiled from Kentucky's displays, saying, they are unconstitutionally motivated by a ``predominately religious purpose.'' Not enough reindeer?</p>
  • FREEP THIS POLL

    06/27/2005 8:02:01 PM PDT · by marblehead17 · 11 replies · 440+ views
    CNN ^ | 06-27-2005 | marblehead17
    Do you agree with the Supreme Court’s split decision on the Ten Commandments displays? Yes 16% 23465 votes No, they should be allowed in courthouses 46% 68416 votes No, they should not be allowed on other government land 38% 55510 votes
  • Limits of Religion in Public Life

    06/27/2005 3:56:05 PM PDT · by shadowfighter · 5 replies · 148+ views
    Limits of Religion in Public Life Court acts wisely on Ten Commandments rulings The Monitor's View On the stage on which the American culture clash over religion is playing out, enter the Supreme Court. Monday's twin decisions allowing the display of the Ten Commandments on the Texas State Capitol grounds, but not in Kentucky courtrooms, settle a major contentious issue between political religious conservatives and secular humanists. In this contest, religious conservatives seek to advance a brand of morality in America by actively promoting religious themes and ideas in government. On the other side, secular humanists demand a strict elimination...
  • RULINGS IN THE U.S. SUPREME COURT'S TEN COMMANDMENTS CASES

    06/27/2005 11:03:42 AM PDT · by OXENinFLA · 38 replies · 1,420+ views
    FINDLAW ^ | 6-27-05 | SCOTUS
    RULINGS IN THE U.S. SUPREME COURT'S TEN COMMANDMENTS CASES June 27, 2005 In different rulings, the justices ban displays of the Ten Commandments at courthouses, but allow them to be placed on government land. The Courthouse Ruling: Opinion (McCreary County v. ACLU)http://laws.findlaw.com/us/000/03-1693.html The ACLU's Attorneyhttp://pview.findlaw.com/view/3433759_1 Attorney for Liberty Counselhttp://pview.findlaw.com/view/1438042_1 Case Dockethttp://rd.findlaw.com/scripts/nl.pl?url=11198556000_nl The Government Land Ruling: Opinion (Van Orden v. Perry)http://laws.findlaw.com/us/000/03-1500.html Attorney for Texashttp://pview.findlaw.com/vie
  • SCOTUS Rules Ten Commandments NOT allowed at KY Courthouse (allowed on *grounds* in TX)

    06/27/2005 7:08:45 AM PDT · by janetjanet998 · 845 replies · 16,680+ views
    MSNBC | June 27, 2005
    will post more info as it comes in...
  • Justice Sunday: Stop the Filibuster Against People of Faith

    04/13/2005 5:33:03 PM PDT · by CHARLITE · 1 replies · 3,715+ views
    FAMILY RESEARCH COUNCIL.ORG ^ | APRIL 14, 2005 | TONY PERKINS, PRESIDENT FRC ACTION
    Dear Friend: A day of decision is upon us. Whether it was the legalization of abortion, the banning of school prayer, the expulsion of the 10 Commandments from public spaces, or the starvation of Terri Schiavo, decisions by the courts have not only changed our nation's course, but even led to the taking of human lives. As the liberal, anti-Christian dogma of the left has been repudiated in almost every recent election, the courts have become the last great bastion for liberalism. For years activist courts, aided by liberal interest groups like the ACLU, have been quietly working under the...
  • Stone Buddhas and the Ten Commandments: Icons or Idols?

    04/05/2005 8:11:14 PM PDT · by xzins · 1 replies · 263+ views
    Orthovox ^ | Apr 05 | Sheila Enstine
    Stone Buddhas and the Ten Commandments: Icons or Idols?   An OrthoVox Exclusive by Sheila Enstine     An icon is a flawed representation of the real thing.  An idol, on the other hand, attempts to replace the real thing.  As author Madeleine L’Engle explains, an idol is an icon of which we have false expectations.   If Afghanistan’s now-defunct Taliban government is any indication, L’Engle’s distinction is too fragile for some people to grasp. Consider the plight of the Buddhas of Bamiyan. Since the fifth century, these two massive statues placidly watched over the southern-most route of the...
  • Breaking the Third Commandment

    03/01/2005 11:42:51 AM PST · by Ken Nielsen · 39 replies · 694+ views
    On Antiques Roadshow, when someone is told how much their collectible is worth, they may respond "Oh my G-d." The same for many TV shows where live interviews are covered. In these instances, the comment has no meaning, and is actually a vain use of the name of the Most High. It makes me cringe and reach for the remote to change channels, or turn the TV off when I hear these thoughtless comments. This subject be brought up, so people can be made aware of the casual use of the name of God is actually a form of cursing...
  • Ten Commandments Excerpts

    03/02/2005 8:38:03 PM PST · by mdittmar · 10 replies · 417+ views
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | March 2, 2005 | ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Excerpts from Wednesday's Supreme Court arguments in Van Orden v. Perry, the Texas case, and McCreary County, Ky., v. ACLU, challenging Ten Commandments displays on government property, as recorded by the Alderson Reporting Co. Inc.: Erwin Chemerinsky, attorney for man seeking removal of the Texas display: The government may put religious symbols on its property, including the Ten Commandments, but must do so in a way that does not endorse religion or a particular religion, but does not have the purpose of advancing religion, but does not favor any particular religion. Justice Antonin Scalia: Mr. Chemerinsky, I suppose that opening...