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Showing posts with the label politics and religion

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - When Liberty Enslaves (Aveta)

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  Today's Publisher's Pride is When Liberty Enslaves by Jerry Aveta, which reached #177 in campaigns & elections and #386 in abolition history of the US. Book Description There is a common experience between our experiences today and those before the Civil War many years ago.  The effect of the intersection of faith and politics during these two experiences has had on our elections and our governance is uncanny in their similarities.  Both times an election insurrection was stopped by the sitting vice president.  Both times had people of the same faith on both sides of the social issues of the day claiming God’s favor and willing to divide the nation over those competing positions. Part 1 of this writing focuses on the Civil War era and how liberty centered around the issue of equality.  Some people of faith believed all men were equal, some did not. Part 2 focuses on our present times and how liberty centers on the sanctity of life concerning abortion and ...

Love, Hate, and Religion--and the Influence of Politics

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  Religion can sanctify compassion—or sanctify cruelty. When faith becomes a badge of identity rather than a path of conscience, it can turn moral conviction into moral exclusion. America’s current struggle with religiously charged politics is not new, but it is newly volatile. Understanding how we arrived here—and how we might move forward—requires tracing the spiritual roots of division as carefully as the political ones. 1. Where we are now Across the United States, religious language increasingly shapes political rhetoric. Candidates invoke divine favor; voters interpret policy through moral absolutes. Surveys show that religious affiliation now predicts political alignment more strongly than class or geography . Evangelical Christianity, once a diverse movement of revival and service, has become a major partisan identity. Meanwhile, secular Americans often define themselves in opposition to that identity, creating a moral binary that mirrors the political one. The result is a...