It wasn't as bad as the catholic-funded historians/editors/storytellers made it out to be.andy7171 wrote:Yeah those first couple of centuries were the salad days of Christianity. Living high on the hog, they were!
"Christianity" was a paganized mess just like many other "religions" in the area at the time.
The claim of persecution is vital for every religion. They still do it today:
PFAW.comRatcheting Up the Religious Persecution Rhetoric
The next day, Sen. Jim DeMint told CBN's David Brody that "Democrats are looking for every opportunity to purge faith and prayer from the public square." Did DeMint miss the inauguration?
Fox News also chimed in on Wednesday, with a story that covered the bases: The headline announced that "Conservative Groups Declare Obama's Stimulus Bill a War on Prayer," while the opening line of the story attributed the "war on prayer" to "Democrats in Congress."
Also jumping into the fray were the Traditional Values Coalition, the Liberty Counsel, and the Family Research Council.
"Religious activity is already scarce at most of our colleges, the Obama people want to make sure it is extinct," complained the TVC's Andrea Lafferty. Which "Obama people" she has in mind is not clear, but purging religion from college campuses does not seem a likely priority for Joshua DuBois, the former pastor named to oversee White House faith outreach.
The Liberty Counsel's Mathew Staver took the claim even further, saying that the provision "will lead to the banning of all religious activity from all public facilities" and snarking that "Apparently, President Obama's idea of faith-based initiatives is to remove faith from all initiatives."
And the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, reportedly considering a run for the U.S. Senate, called for "Hammering Out Dems' Anti-Faith Building Provision," which he said would encourage colleges and universities to discourage religious activity on campus out of fear of losing out on federal dollars.










