Quantcast Renegade Rip
College Media Network

Clergymen discuss church and state

Lily Fahel

Issue date: 5/9/07 Section: Campus
  • Print
  • Email
The Kern County Chapter of Americans United, along with Freedom First, assembled an interfaith panel discussion on the separation of church and state on May 6 at Bakersfield College in an effort to understand the various religious standpoints in the community.
One speaker represented Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Hinduism and each addressed the issue of separation of church and state as well as two other issues, which each speaker believed to be "hot button issues of today."
Rev. Dianne Ryder, from a Christian point of view, expressed her desire to keep church separate from state by discussing the "on-going experiment called democracy" and believes "the state shouldn't be concerned with my faith."
One of Rev. Ryder's two selected "hot button issues" was same-sex marriages or unions, explaining she was uncomfortable with deciding if a loving union between two people of the same sex is right or wrong. However, she has no problem offering blessings upon it should it prove to be genuinely out of a "covenantal love." Rev. Ryder believes the state can do its part by settling financial and legal matters when it comes to marital issues.
Imam Salim Morgan believed the contrary, as he represented Islam and thoroughly believes that "Islam is the state." Imam Morgan, a Muslim convert, studied Islam in Saudi Arabia and is convinced that "religion to Muslims is everything in life," so therefore is against the separation of church and state.
While Imam Morgan is a supporter of a union between church and state, he did address the issue of polygamy and declared his strict belief that "marriage is a religious phenomenon of which the state should not be concerned with."
Representing the Jewish faith, Rabbi Cheryl Rosenstein declared that all should be "steadfast guardians of separation of church and state." Rabbi Rosenstein explained the long history of abuse when religion and state are intertwined and chose to address taxpayer support for religious schools and social welfare issues.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

What do you recycle?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement