stovebolts
Member
I find it remarkable how those words have changed in meaning since they were first written by our founding fathers.
It seems anymore that the idea of separation of church and state is no being defined to mean that you can't have religious beliefs anywhere near government. In other words, government is to be secular in thought, not religious.
The idea I got when I was a young kid in school was that when our founding fathers created this great nation, they wanted it to be ruled by the people, for the people and they saw how in their time, and from previous historical accounts where the Church was the governing authority of a nation. I am speaking of the "Church of England" specifically.
In short, I believe that the separation between Church and State was intended to keep the Church as a institution from having direct governmental authority. Unfortunately, the separation of Church and State seems as if it means that our children can't pray in school etc.
It seems anymore that the idea of separation of church and state is no being defined to mean that you can't have religious beliefs anywhere near government. In other words, government is to be secular in thought, not religious.
The idea I got when I was a young kid in school was that when our founding fathers created this great nation, they wanted it to be ruled by the people, for the people and they saw how in their time, and from previous historical accounts where the Church was the governing authority of a nation. I am speaking of the "Church of England" specifically.
In short, I believe that the separation between Church and State was intended to keep the Church as a institution from having direct governmental authority. Unfortunately, the separation of Church and State seems as if it means that our children can't pray in school etc.