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Rev. Emily C. Heath

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How to Determine If Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened in Just 10 Quick Questions

Posted: 09/05/2012 10:14 am

It seems like this election season "religious liberty" is a hot topic. Rumors of its demise are all around, as are politicians who want to make sure that you know they will never do anything to intrude upon it.

I'm a religious person with a lifelong passion for civil rights, so this is of great interest to me. So much so, that I believe we all need to determine whether our religious liberties are indeed at risk. So, as a public service, I've come up with this little quiz. I call it "How to Determine if Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened in Just 10 Quick Questions." Just pick "A" or "B" for each question.

1. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am not allowed to go to a religious service of my own choosing.
B) Others are allowed to go to religious services of their own choosing.

2. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am not allowed to marry the person I love legally, even though my religious community blesses my marriage.
B) Some states refuse to enforce my own particular religious beliefs on marriage on those two guys in line down at the courthouse.

3. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am being forced to use birth control.
B) I am unable to force others to not use birth control.

4. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am not allowed to pray privately.
B) I am not allowed to force others to pray the prayers of my faith publicly.

5. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) Being a member of my faith means that I can be bullied without legal recourse.
B) I am no longer allowed to use my faith to bully gay kids with impunity.

6. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am not allowed to purchase, read or possess religious books or material.
B) Others are allowed to have access books, movies and websites that I do not like.

7. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) My religious group is not allowed equal protection under the establishment clause.
B) My religious group is not allowed to use public funds, buildings and resources as we would like, for whatever purposes we might like.

8. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) Another religious group has been declared the official faith of my country.
B) My own religious group is not given status as the official faith of my country.

9. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) My religious community is not allowed to build a house of worship in my community.
B) A religious community I do not like wants to build a house of worship in my community.

10. My religious liberty is at risk because:

A) I am not allowed to teach my children the creation stories of our faith at home.
B) Public school science classes are teaching science.

Scoring key:

If you answered "A" to any question, then perhaps your religious liberty is indeed at stake. You and your faith group have every right to now advocate for equal protection under the law. But just remember this one little, constitutional, concept: this means you can fight for your equality -- not your superiority.

If you answered "B" to any question, then not only is your religious liberty not at stake, but there is a strong chance that you are oppressing the religious liberties of others. This is the point where I would invite you to refer back to the tenets of your faith, especially the ones about your neighbors.

In closing, no matter what soundbites you hear this election year, remember this: Religious liberty is never secured by a campaign of religious superiority. The only way to ensure your own religious liberty remains strong is by advocating for the religious liberty of all, including those with whom you may passionately disagree. Because they deserve the same rights as you. Nothing more. Nothing less.

Most and Least Religious States In The Country

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  • #1: Mississippi (59 percent)

  • #2 Utah (57 percent)

  • #3 Alabama (56 percent)

  • #4 Louisiana (54 percent)

  • #5 Arkansas (54 percent)

  • #6 South Carolina (54 percent)

  • #7 Tennessee (52 percent)

  • #8 North Carolina (50 percent)

  • #9 Georgia (48 percent)

  • #10 Oklahoma (48 percent)

  • #51 Vermont (23 percent)

  • #50 New Hampshire (23 percent)

  • #49 Maine (25 percent)

  • #48 Massachusetts (28 percent)

  • #47 Alaska (28 percent)

  • #46 Oregon (30 percent)

  • #45 Nevada (30 percent)

  • #44 Washington (30 percent)

  • #43 Connecticut (31 percent)

  • #42 District of Columbia (32 percent)

  • #42 New York (32 percent)

  • #42 Rhode Island (32 percent)

 

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It seems like this election season "religious liberty" is a hot topic. Rumors of its demise are all around, as are politicians who want to make sure that you know they will never do anything to intrud...
It seems like this election season "religious liberty" is a hot topic. Rumors of its demise are all around, as are politicians who want to make sure that you know they will never do anything to intrud...
 
 
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07:15 PM on 10/08/2012
Spot On! Especially 2 & 3. You don't get to dictate who people may or may not marry, and people are allowed to do what they want with their own bodies, conservatives might like to think otherwise but they're wrong. But if you want to live YOUR life according to the doctrines of your faith, nobody is stopping you, you are not in any way having your religious freedom attacked just because people won't fall into lockstep and live their lives how you dictate they should.
10:46 AM on 10/01/2012
Wow way to oversimplify complex issues. Wake the Danials - to even compare Christianity to Sharia law is an insult to Islam.
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SuperHeretic
A proud Rationalist.
10:17 AM on 10/03/2012
Christianity WAS very similar to extremist Islam until secular laws, and the will of the people, put a stop to a lot of the bad behavior.

The church used to torture and burn people. They also used to have the bad habit of going to other countries, converting the people (often by force), and robbing them blind. After all, the church needed those rooms made of gold.
03:32 PM on 10/03/2012
The Catholic Church did that. Even before the Reformation the Church needed to reform/ Not true followers of Christ. The kings, kings and powerful came into the church. That is why in the USA the church was to be protected from the government. Under Sharia law freedom of speech is completely not tolerated. That is not true today and no one wants it that way. I really don't want to go farther with this because I just am too busy. This is a over simpleminded picture of a huge problem.
06:01 AM on 09/30/2012
Religion is a mess, and not for the reasons you think I'm going to say. It still operates like a Government, and for freedom and democracy, that's a problem. It's a cancer inside our own system of Government making sure their rule of law is the law of the land. It's like Sharia but Christian.
05:30 PM on 09/26/2012
Good to see it put so succinctly.. Thank you, Rev. Emily C. Heath.....
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Lolly Jean
I think, therefore I am not a republican.
05:13 PM on 09/26/2012
I love this!
01:24 PM on 09/26/2012
Wonderful article.
06:33 PM on 09/25/2012
10. My religious liberty is at risk because:

B) Public school science classes are teaching science.
Has nothing to do with religion, it is science. If you want to teach religion in science. Then teach science in Church. Religious freedom should never extend to science classes. Religion is faith and Science is based on qualitive and quantative theories based on evidence.
01:25 PM on 09/26/2012
Amen! ;)
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Danielle Kichler
10:18 AM on 09/30/2012
I think the objections is that they are not teaching bible stories as "science". There are people who think creationism should be taught in science classes and think that any attempt to get it out of science is undermining religion.

However, to be fair, creationism DOES have a place in schools--but in a comparative religions elective and NOT in science classes.
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Elyse Draper
Freelance journalist and literary novelist
01:25 PM on 09/25/2012
“The easy confidence with which I know another man's religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also.”
― Mark Twain
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NoOne18
What're YOU lookin' at?
02:10 PM on 10/02/2012
That's rather glib/facile/shallow, considering that there are very often reasons besides just "confidence" that you know a religion is false. Take Scientology (for my favorite example). We know it is false because of the people who knew L. Ron Hubbard. He *told* them he was going to MAKE UP a religion, just to make money. & he did.
12:07 AM on 09/24/2012
Fact: when the Pilgrims of Plymouth Rock fame fled Britain seeking the freedom to practice their faith without persecution by the Church of England, They found that freedom in Holland but as Holland had extended religious liberty to all; they weren't about to tolerate this, so they came across the Atlantic to decimate the populations of first nations people. Freedom of religion is an essential component of liberty. But it does not ever include the right to deny, diminish, or eliminate; the rights of others.
06:07 PM on 09/25/2012
Actually, by the time the Pilgrims landed, the population of "New England" was already severely diminished due to diseases brought by European fishermen.
01:44 PM on 09/23/2012
Excellent!

I will be sharing this!
03:44 PM on 09/20/2012
Bravo!
03:30 PM on 09/20/2012
No words. Just this. http://www.thestate.ae/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/olivia-gif-5.gif
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CrazyCarl
"200 channels...nuthin' but cats"
11:04 PM on 09/26/2012
THAT was awesome !
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alieninthecaribbean
Globe-trotting. plain talking, all-race loving, al
02:28 PM on 09/19/2012
Brilliant! Brava! Kudos!

I once posted up on by blog a picture of:

A Nigerian man, bludgeoned to death by Muslim extremists for being a Christian, his carcass already rotting and captioned it (What Chrsitians in Nigeria call persecution)

And next to it, a picture of an atheist billboard that read: "Don't believe in God? You are not alone" and captioned it (What Christians in America call persecution)

I did that just to give people a little perspective. Freedom of religion is not about a promise that YOUR religion will be the most popular or influential, wield authority over others, be free from criticism and get precidence over all other beliefs or non-beliefs.
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Valerie Finnigan
can only be herself.
12:11 AM on 10/04/2012
It can be looked at it a different way.

Show a picture of a Christian girl in Pakistan imprisoned for allegedly committing blasphemy against Islam, and we can caption that, "What religious imposition looks like in Pakistan."

Show a picture of a woman paying for her own birth control, and you can caption that, "What we think counts as religious imposition in America."
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alieninthecaribbean
Globe-trotting. plain talking, all-race loving, al
12:26 AM on 10/04/2012
False equivelency.  No doubt, paying for your own birth control is not nearly as severe as imprisonment for having a different religious belief.  But the example I used, contrasted DEATH with mere offense to one's religious pride.  Unequal health coverage (where a woman is making a financial contribution out of her own pocket) or inability to afford a birth control regimen due to financial reasons actually HURTS women and families.  So to match my comparative, you need to find an example of religious imposition that does not hurt anyone beyond mere personal offense. You could have used Christmas displays for example.
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Tribidemp
This shall remain empty.
11:14 AM on 09/16/2012
Finally, someone that gets it. Thank you Rev Heath.
08:56 AM on 09/15/2012
This is hilarious. A prime example of lying with statistics or "you can make statistics say anything by asking the right questions."
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Angel1999
Microbiologist & Historian
11:59 PM on 09/15/2012
Which statistics would those be?
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LibRule
So how did that one-term thingy work for you?
01:13 PM on 09/17/2012
LOL! So I take it you had several 'b' answers. It is sad that you cannot see that you are actually trying to restrict the liberties of others. That is why a lot of us do not like a lot of you. Do what you feel is right, and learn tolerance.