Ben Carson and Eric Metaxas, who both gained notoriety for their speeches
at a National Prayer Breakfast, appeared together Saturday and warned about a
loss of religious freedom, at the Conservative Political Action Conference in
National Harbor, Md.
The
controversy over the Obama administration's birth control mandate is about
religious freedom, not contraception, Metaxas argued.
Paraphrasing
how he views the government's position, Metaxas said, "We will force you
to violate your conscience. Why? Because we can. We have the power and you
Catholics are just the backward religious minority."
Metaxas'
most recent book is a biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Christian theologian
who opposed Hitler during Nazi Germany. Because of Bonhoeffer, Metaxas said, he
found himself thinking more about religious freedom in America. He believes
there are some "disturbing parallels" between what was taking place
in Germany in the 1930s and the United States today on the issue of religious
freedom.
"When a
government bullies a minority, instead of protecting a minority," Metaxas
said, "that is the beginning of the end of America."
The birth
control mandate requires all employers to cover contraception, sterilization
and the "morning-after" pill, in their employees health care plans.
There is a religious exemption, but the exemption is so narrow that most
religious employers do not qualify. Houses of worship, for instance, are
exempt, but a religious school, hospital or social service organization, is not
exempt.
"Freedom
of worship says you can have your little strange rituals and say whatever you
like in your little religious buildings for an hour or two on Sundays, but once
you leave that building you will bow to the secular orthodoxy of the
state," Metaxas explained. "We will tell you what to think on the big
and important questions like when life begins and who gets to decide when to
end it and what marriage is, and if you don't like it, tough luck. That's
freedom of worship and they have that in China and they had that in Germany in
Bonhoeffer's day."
Metaxas is
also concerned that the introduction of gay marriage will lead to a loss of
religious freedom.
"Here
is my question to all the legal scholars across America," Metaxas said,
"what about the religious freedom of those who dissent on that issue? When
the legal definition is changed, will they be forced to stifle their religious
feelings because the state demands it? This is not a live and let live issue.
If it were, it would be another story. No, if marriage is redefined, it will
utterly cripple religious freedom in America and it's already beginning to do
that and no one is even talking about this."
Carson's
speech was more wide ranging and was similar to his speech last month at the
National Prayer Breakfast. He spoke about taxes, health care, political
correctness and religious freedom.
"We
have to resist this war on God," Carson, a neurosurgeon who will soon
retire, said. "People don't want to talk about God and don't you ever dare
mention Jesus Christ. And this is supposed to be a country where we have
freedom of religion and freedom of speech? It is absolutely absurd."
Carson's
National Prayer Breakfast speech became a YouTube sensation and helped launched
his book, America the Beautiful: Rediscovering What Made This Nation
Great, to the top of the New York Times bestseller list.
Metaxas'
National Prayer Breakfast speech in 2012 also became popular on YouTube. Like
Carson's speech, it contained some pointed criticisms of the event's main
speaker, President Barack Obama.
After, both
men addressed CPAC they sat together on stage for a more informal conversation.
In that talk, Metaxas urged the conservatives in attendance to always express
the truth in civility and love.
"I
thought you spoke with grace and civility," Metaxas told Carson about his
National Prayer Breakfast speech. "I was dismayed that the punditocracy,
most of the folks in the conservative world, were kinda spiking the ball and
doing the end zone dance at what you said, which colored those remarks in a way
that, I thought, was not appropriate."
"I just
want to say to my fellow conservatives," Metaxas continued. "We need
to express the truth in civility and love, otherwise, it's magically not the
truth anymore."
Are they
right or worng?
The speeches
can be viewed here.
Source: Christianpost
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