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Have you all, especially the ones of you who lament the "removal of God" from schools,

considered that the "reason" that only wealthy, white males were afforded educational
opportunity in the Colonies was that this "rule" was common to almost all of the existing
religious paradigms? Typically, only men were allowed to speak in church. The women were
forced to maintain reverential silence -- both to God and their men. Corporal punishment was an
acceptable form of correcting the unruly wenches. Women, and persons of color, were not
allowed to own businesses or property. It was understood that Scripture taught a complete
submission of woman to man, and that "colored" people bore their coloring as a "mark from
God" which signified sinful imperfection. Initially, due primarily to Scriptural justification, the
voice of the vote was only granted to the wealthy and educated (property owning) white men.
Why educate anyone else? Who else, but these proper white men, had any right to participate in
the making of such weighty decisions?
For all of recorded history [and even before that, I suspect], pretended revelation (false
claims of direct reception of "truth" from God) and spiritual/religious myth have served as
coercive tools of conquest, domination, and deception. Whole peoples and nations have been
eradicated "in the name of God." In more recent history, American Indians became victims of
wholesale slaughter – largely due to the "truth" of their "barbaric nature." They were determined
to be incorrigible, corrupted "heathens," worthy only of death. What was their "crime?" They
were people of another color, who wore odd or little clothing, spoke in strange tongues, had
different traditions, and, oh, coincidentally they were hindering the conquest of a vast and
resourceful land that the "holy" white men wanted to occupy – with the full support of
Providence. Enslavement of African Negroes in the Colonies and the United States was deemed
"right in the sight of God." These "animals," to whom we now refer as citizens, were bought and
sold and treated as mere chattel -- of little more use, value, or purpose than a horse or a donkey.
"God said" that all of this was just fine. Of what were the Negroes guilty? They were people of
another color, who wore odd or little clothing, spoke in strange tongues, had different traditions,
and, oh, coincidentally they were quite helpful to their owners in the taming and exploitation of a
vast and resourceful land that the "holy" white men now occupied. According to the en vogue
religious teachings of the times, these non-people got exactly what they deserved.
It is common to look to other systems of religion as examples of incorrect (ungodly)
understanding while ignoring the inconsistencies of one's own. A glaring example of this is the
current conflict between the so-called Christian World and Islam. Muslims have codified their
"reality":
Me…
Me against my brother...
My brother and me against our cousins...
Our cousins, my brother and me against the world.

How about this one?

Me…
Me against my Methodist brother...
My Methodist brother and me against the Catholics...
The Catholics, my Methodist brother and me against the Muslims.

Or, you can make up your own. You get the point.

Everyone -- of every persuasion -- needs to pray. Perhaps there is a grain of true


revelation in one or more of the systems of religious practice, and the True God, who has
rendered true revelation, will hear their prayers and heal their hearts and lands. I vehemently
reassert: IF Almighty God is "in" anything, He will NOT be removed. Who among us is able to
undo that which God has done? Creation cannot overcome its Creator.
If I am accused of heresy, the irrational accusation arises from insecurities, doubts, and
misguided perceptions. A quite famous Jewish heretic prophet admonished his followers to not
worry about the splinter in another person's eye until they removed the log from their own.
Perhaps we could all benefit from the application of such wisdom in our "educational" views? In
the meantime, rest assured...God has not gone anywhere.

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