NAVIGATION
|
Your New Scoop SiteWelcome to Scoop! To help you figure things out, there is a Scoop Admin Guide which can hopefully answer most of your questions. Some tips:
For support, questions, and general help with Scoop, email support@scoophost.com ScoopHost.com is currently running Scoop version Undeterminable from . |
Tag: Separation of Church and StateBy Kevin Rex Heine, Section News
Article 1, Section 4, of the Michigan Constitution states:
Every person shall be at liberty to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience. No person shall be compelled to attend, or, against his consent, to contribute to the erection or support of any place of religious worship, or to pay tithes, taxes, or other rates for the support of any minister of the gospel or teacher of religion. No money shall be appropriated or drawn from the treasury for the benefit of any religious sect or society, theological or religious seminary; nor shall property belonging to the state be appropriated for any such purpose. The civil and political rights, privileges, and capacities of no person shall be diminished or enlarged on account of his religious belief. This, of course, is a direct offshoot of Amendment 1 of the Constitution of the United States, and is fairly straightforward on its face. I'm a pretty big believer in the constitutional concept of keeping church and state separate. The faith I practice holds that both the church and state are both instituted and sanctioned by God, and that the proper relation between them is preserved only when each remains within its divinely assigned sphere of influence and uses its divinely entrusted means of operation. Thus, with regard to church and state, those who practice the same faith as me reject - among other things - any attempt by the state to restrict the free exercise of religion. So I was understandably distressed to hear from a friend of mine on the Kent County Committee on Religious Freedom of an attempt by one municipality in this county to dupe every religious organization within its borders into complying with federal, state, and local laws . . . including laws with which those religions may be compelled by conscience to disagree.
(6 comments, 2463 words in story) Full Story By conservmatt, Section News
The separation clause as defined by Thomas Jefferson specifically states that the American people's legislature "should make no law respecting an establishment of religion." Which, taken on the whole would seem to indicate that the legislature cannot make law(s) that establish(es) a religion. This raises the question: What is a religion?
(5 comments, 519 words in story) Full Story |
External FeedsMetro/State News RSS from The Detroit News+ Craig: Cushingberry tried twice to elude police, was given preferential treatment + Detroit police arrest man suspected of burning women with blowtorch + Fouts rips video as 'scurrilous,' defends Chicago trip with secretary + Wind, winter weather hammer state from Mackinac Bridge to southeast Mich. + Detroit Cass Tech QB Campbell expected to be released from custody Friday + New water rates range from -16% to +14%; see change by community + Detroit's bankruptcy gets controversial turn in new Honda ad + Royal Oak Twp., Highland Park in financial emergency, review panels find + Grosse Ile Twp. leads list of Michigan's 10 safest cities + Wayne Co. sex crimes backlog grows after funding feud idles Internet Crime Unit + Judge upholds 41-60 year sentence of man guilty in Detroit firefighter's death + Detroit man robbed, shot in alley on west side + Fire at Detroit motel forces evacuation of guests + Survivors recount Syrian war toll at Bloomfield Hills event + Blacks slain in Michigan at 3rd-highest rate in US Politics RSS from The Detroit News + Apologetic Agema admits errors but won't resign + Snyder: Reform 'dumb' rules to allow more immigrants to work in Detroit + GOP leaders shorten presidential nominating season + Dems: Another 12,600 Michiganians lose extended jobless benefits + Mike Huckabee's comments on birth control gift for Dems + Granholm to co-chair pro-Clinton PAC for president + Republican panel approves tougher penalties for unauthorized early primary states + Michigan seeks visas to lure immigrants to Detroit + Peters raises $1M-plus for third straight quarter in Senate bid + Bill would let lawyers opt out of Michigan state bar + Michigan lawmakers launch more bills against sex trade + Balanced budget amendment initiative gets a jumpstart + Feds subpoena Christie's campaign, GOP + Poll: At Obama's 5-year point, few see a turnaround + Obama to release 2015 budget March 4 Front Page
Sunday January 19th
Saturday January 18th
Friday January 17th
Thursday January 16th
Tuesday January 14th
|