Musicmystery -> RE: Bible bill in U.S. Congress (5/22/2009 1:23:48 PM)
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quote:
How many people who do not consider themselves Christian – including Deists – believe in a single God as opposed to many Gods? Why is this? Even if some of the founders did not believe in the God of the Bible, they were from a culture heavily steeped in Christianity and this led to certain presumptions, certain paradigms, on their part. That’s my point. Marc, Monotheism FAR predates Christianity, including (then) major religions in ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Persia, not to mention Judaism (also long before Christianity) and Islam (OK, that one came later). Even Hinduism, with its many deities, all comes back to Brahman: the Upanishads open with "Brahman is in all that is; Brahman is in all that is not," and a later chapter describes the God of Fire bragging, but without Brahman, he is unable to set even a straw aflame. Your reference to the impact of Judeo-Christian thought on our culture is accurate, but hardly evidence for a Christian national foundation. We are also heavily under the influence of Greco-Roman and Germanic thought, but I notice no one's claiming the U.S. was founded as a pagan nation or a Celtic/Norse/Barbarian nation--though those claims would deserve equal merit.
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