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guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 02:15 PM Mar 2019

More than 100 religious leaders in Tennessee take a stand against slate of anti-LGBT legislation

From the article:

More than 100 clergy members from across the state signed onto a statement opposing six bills before the Tennessee General Assembly this session.
"As leaders of faith communities we oppose these bills in the Tennessee General Assembly. They promote discrimination rather than justice and demean the worth of LGBTQ people in our state. We call on people of good will to join us in speaking out for basic fairness," the statement reads.


To read more:

https://www.tennessean.com/news/
49 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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More than 100 religious leaders in Tennessee take a stand against slate of anti-LGBT legislation (Original Post) guillaumeb Mar 2019 OP
More than 100? Act_of_Reparation Mar 2019 #1
Well it IS Tennesee...and it is a start /nt sdfernando Mar 2019 #3
The direct link Maraya1969 Mar 2019 #2
Thank you. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #6
How many more than 100. MineralMan Mar 2019 #4
Yes, the perfect is ever the enemy of the good for some here. eom guillaumeb Mar 2019 #5
Have you even visited Tennessee? MineralMan Mar 2019 #7
And you "know" that they will fail? guillaumeb Mar 2019 #8
They already did. Act_of_Reparation Mar 2019 #12
I do know they'll fail. MineralMan Mar 2019 #13
And LGBTs have been paying the price for it ever since. marylandblue Mar 2019 #16
As they do in China as well? eom guillaumeb Mar 2019 #18
If so, they learnt it from Christian missionaries and Russian Communists marylandblue Mar 2019 #19
So before the 19th century China was Eden? guillaumeb Mar 2019 #20
Specifically, it was more tolerant of homosexuals marylandblue Mar 2019 #22
Fee free to validate your claim. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #25
Here, happy reading. marylandblue Mar 2019 #26
From the very beginning: guillaumeb Mar 2019 #28
I knew you would cherry pick the first thing you saw in the article marylandblue Mar 2019 #32
Christianity is over 2000 years old. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #34
Yes, of course. The prohibition on homosexuality came from the Hebrew Bible. marylandblue Mar 2019 #35
I looked at this site after your reponse. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #36
I don't think you can compare the mild and inconsistent disapproval in Eastern Religions marylandblue Mar 2019 #44
Way to dodge the point Lordquinton Mar 2019 #11
No, it is exactly the point. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #17
So China is writing laws in Tennessee to oppress LGBTQIA Lordquinton Mar 2019 #37
Yes, your reading of what I actually said is a bit fantastic. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #38
There has to be some reason you keep bringing China up Lordquinton Mar 2019 #39
And why do you think that I bring it up in my posts about China? guillaumeb Mar 2019 #40
I've stated many times Lordquinton Mar 2019 #41
Intolerance. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #42
That's the motte-and-bailey Lordquinton Mar 2019 #43
That's like a city block's worth of churches Lordquinton Mar 2019 #10
I just started my own religion. Act_of_Reparation Mar 2019 #14
That's awesome. Mariana Mar 2019 #9
No, I do not. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #21
Is China really non-theistic? Mariana Mar 2019 #24
Your last link validates the claim. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #27
So, back to the subject of your thread, Gil. Mariana Mar 2019 #29
That has nothing to do with the post. guillaumeb Mar 2019 #30
12% of Republicans disapprove of Trump edhopper Mar 2019 #15
I guess we should. Mariana Mar 2019 #23
Or view this 12% as peopel with whom we might find some common ground? eom guillaumeb Mar 2019 #31
Not as long as edhopper Mar 2019 #33
126 signed it, but in Tennessee that's a ridiculously small number Rob H. Mar 2019 #45
It's even a smaller minority than that. MineralMan Mar 2019 #46
Yep Rob H. Mar 2019 #47
There are quite a few megachurches in Tennessee, MineralMan Mar 2019 #48
Hey now, gil doesn't like you pointing out facts. trotsky Mar 2019 #49

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
1. More than 100?
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 02:51 PM
Mar 2019

Amazing. Let us get down on our knees and give thanks to religion for hardly solving the problem it created.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
6. Thank you.
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 05:28 PM
Mar 2019

And:

The Tennessee Equality Project, which advocates for the rights of LGBT people in the state, helped organize the faith leaders who signed on to the statement.
Chris Sanders, the executive director of the Tennessee Equality Project, said in a news release that all six of the bills "strike at the dignity of LGBT people" in the state. Each bill is sponsored by Republican lawmakers.


MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
4. How many more than 100.
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 03:38 PM
Mar 2019

100 preachers don't even make a small dent in anything having to do with religion in Tennessee. Have you spent any time in that state at all?

The legislators will simply toss that statement.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
7. Have you even visited Tennessee?
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 07:21 PM
Mar 2019

Do you know what a small percentage 100 is of all the preachers in that state? Do you think they will change minds in TN?

They won't. They're trying, and that's nice, but it won't work. What might is some federal laws with teeth.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
8. And you "know" that they will fail?
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 08:04 PM
Mar 2019

As I said, for a few here, the perfect is always the enemy of the good.

And since this is a good thing, good news, some must trash what does not conform to the preferred narrative.

12 Disciples changed history.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
12. They already did.
Fri Mar 22, 2019, 07:18 AM
Mar 2019

If the proposed legistation fails to pass, it will not be because of 100 fringe god-botherers. It will be because millions of Tennesseans are better at humaning than their pastors.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
13. I do know they'll fail.
Fri Mar 22, 2019, 08:13 AM
Mar 2019

They will fail because so many other "religious leaders" are in the anti-LGBTQ camp. Think powers of 10 more.

That's why I asked if you had been to Tennessee or are familiar with that state in some way. Of course, you never answered that question. Tennessee is part of the Bible Belt, and is dominated by evangelical and fundamentalist churches. All of those support treating LGBTQ people as second class citizens at best.

Once again, religionnews.com is not a reliable source of actual news. It is a heavily biased source of stories, from which you select some of the least reliable ones. Then, you post minor excerpts from those stories here and expect people to congratulate you.

There is no "perfect" in your story. It is a story about a tiny minority of religious leaders taking a position that is not held by most people in that state. Even that tiny minority is not "perfect." It's not good news, really, if you look at actual numbers of people in TN. As you will see, if you continue to follow this issue, their efforts will produce no good effect on the TN legislature, which doesn't care what those preachers say.

The only preferred narrative is the truth. Only armed with the truth can people make change.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
19. If so, they learnt it from Christian missionaries and Russian Communists
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 10:26 AM
Mar 2019

Who rejected Christianity but kept many of its prejudices.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
20. So before the 19th century China was Eden?
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 10:31 AM
Mar 2019

Please.

We all know that humans are intolerant. Some apparently prefer to see non-theists as exceptional, and lacking the intolerance that exists in every society.

So the examples of extreme intolerance coming from a country like China, a country run by atheists, runs counter to this belief that somehow by removing religion from society, society will be better.

It will not. It will just be a society of non-religious people who otherwise exhibit all of the same behaviors.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
28. From the very beginning:
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:06 PM
Mar 2019
According to one study, homosexuality was regarded as a normal facet of life in China, prior to the Western impact of 1840 onwards.[1] However, this has been disputed.


So there is one study, and the results of this one study have been disputed.

Conclusive?

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
32. I knew you would cherry pick the first thing you saw in the article
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:44 PM
Mar 2019

The article provides information generally lending support to my position. If you have some other evidence show it. I know you don't, and you probably won't try to track down the scholarly disputes from the original scholars to make a fully informed opinion. Just like you didn't track down the history of geopolitics in Central Asia to better inform yourself about the complex interactions there. And I can't point you to anything on the internet because my knowledge of Central Asia didn't come from the Internet. But I don't have a similar background in the history of homosexuality in China. I do know that the pattern has been reported in many parts of the world. Wherever Christian, Islamic, or Western (until recently) influence went, tolerant attitudes towards homosexuals turned intolerant.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
34. Christianity is over 2000 years old.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:47 PM
Mar 2019

But there are many non-Abrahamic religions that are much older.

So either theism is to blame, or it is not.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
35. Yes, of course. The prohibition on homosexuality came from the Hebrew Bible.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:59 PM
Mar 2019

There is not, so far as I know, any similar prohibition in any other culture of the Ancient Near East. We know that the Canaanites had male and female temple prostitutes. It's possible the prohibition was intended to discourage Canaanite practices that were not part of the Israelite religion.

I say what I have always said. I have no problem with theism. I only have a problem with certain forms of it, mainly conservative or fundamentalist forms. In this cause we have a particular ancient theistic prohibition that has caused much harm. We kept the prohibition long after the original reason was forgotten. This is a feature of conservative theism. It preserves moralities that either never should have been or have long outlived their usefulness.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
44. I don't think you can compare the mild and inconsistent disapproval in Eastern Religions
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 10:06 PM
Mar 2019

To 3,000 years of the death penalty for homosexuals, with not one person objecting prior to the Enlightenment, and even then it was still a crime and it took another 200 years to make it actually acceptable.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
17. No, it is exactly the point.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 10:22 AM
Mar 2019

Humans cause the problem, and as the example of China shows, LGBTQ discrimination is not restricted to theists.

And that explains the discomfort the China posts cause for some here.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
37. So China is writing laws in Tennessee to oppress LGBTQIA
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 07:11 PM
Mar 2019

That a hundred religious leaders are opposing?

Seems far fetched.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
38. Yes, your reading of what I actually said is a bit fantastic.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 07:12 PM
Mar 2019

But high marks for imaginative reframing.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
40. And why do you think that I bring it up in my posts about China?
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 07:26 PM
Mar 2019

The ones that MM keeps asking about?

Why do you think that I post about the many ways that the Chinese leaders treat theists with such intolerance?

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
41. I've stated many times
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 07:43 PM
Mar 2019

And we've had discussions about it. But to restate whataboutism, motte-and-bailey, reframing, false-equalivance, and more like that.

Lordquinton

(7,886 posts)
43. That's the motte-and-bailey
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 07:58 PM
Mar 2019

You make a ridiculous claim, then retreat to some basic thing to seem reasonable, then when the other relents you come back out to the ridiculous claim again.

You don't actually care about China, you are using as a convenient club.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
14. I just started my own religion.
Fri Mar 22, 2019, 08:24 AM
Mar 2019

I call it Waitsism. We read from Bukowski before communion, only Waitists don't use bread and wine. We use whiskey and cigarettes.

So I'm a religious leader now.

Mariana

(15,102 posts)
9. That's awesome.
Thu Mar 21, 2019, 11:27 PM
Mar 2019

However, I noticed the article said nothing about the number of religious leaders who are on record as supporting this legislation. Do you have any idea where we could find that information, Gil? It seems relevant, if we're to decide whether religion has had a positive effect or a negative effect in relation to this issue.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
21. No, I do not.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 10:33 AM
Mar 2019

But I did post information about that non-theistic paradise called China, and that information shows that in the non-theistic paradise, there are very high levels of intolerance for LGBTQ people.

What does that show about the nature of intolerance directed at LGBTQ people?

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
27. Your last link validates the claim.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:03 PM
Mar 2019

But, if this officially atheist Government is losing the battle to make China religion free, what does that say about the belief that theism is slowly dying out?

Mariana

(15,102 posts)
29. So, back to the subject of your thread, Gil.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:13 PM
Mar 2019

Have you found out how many religious leaders in Tennessee have publicly supported this legislation? Is that number higher or lower than the "more than 100" this article is crowing about?

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
30. That has nothing to do with the post.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 03:18 PM
Mar 2019

It was an attempt at diversion from the post. An attempt to "prove" that the perfect is the enemy of the good.

And your earlier response does raise questions about this supposed evolution from theism to what some see as the more rational choice.

Mariana

(15,102 posts)
23. I guess we should.
Sat Mar 23, 2019, 01:45 PM
Mar 2019

That's a much higher percentage of Republicans than the percentage of religious leaders in Tennessee who oppose this hate legislation.

Rob H.

(5,568 posts)
45. 126 signed it, but in Tennessee that's a ridiculously small number
Sun Mar 24, 2019, 03:13 AM
Mar 2019

I lived in Memphis for about 25 years — there are ~800 churches in Memphis proper and roughly 2,000 in the Memphis metropolitan area. Going by the numbers I found here, I added up all the churches in Tennessee and there are a whopping 10,354 churches in the state.

I mean, yeah, good for the 126 for signing it, but if you subtract the number of retired leaders who signed it the number drops to 119 or 1.1% of all church leaders in the state.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
46. It's even a smaller minority than that.
Sun Mar 24, 2019, 08:49 AM
Mar 2019

Many of those 10,354 churches have more than one pastor, which raises the number of "religious leaders" available to hold opinions.

But, in any case, a 1% minority opinion on any topic can be easily ignored as irrelevant. Such is the case in Tennessee with regard to LGBTQ issues. Again, while it's nice that slightly more than 100 religious leaders are in support of LGBTQ rights in Tennessee, but that will not change that state's overall attitudes, nor make those discriminatory bills go away.

Rob H.

(5,568 posts)
47. Yep
Sun Mar 24, 2019, 02:28 PM
Mar 2019

There were six churches within a two-mile radius of my house, and the Southern Baptist megachurch (Bellevue Baptist Church) near my old place currently has 14 pastors and 19 ministers. Its three satellite locations' staffs include four pastors and two ministers.

With 30,000 members they're obviously not representative of all churches in Tennessee, but that's a helluva lot of pastors and ministers employed by just one church. Given that it's a Southern Baptist church with a well-known history of homophobia, I'd be willing to bet that none of their pastors or ministers would ever dream of signing the kind of letter referenced in the OP, either.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
48. There are quite a few megachurches in Tennessee,
Sun Mar 24, 2019, 02:36 PM
Mar 2019

but there is also a smaller church on just about every other street corner in many towns.

1% or so of "religious leaders" is no more significant that 1% of anything. $99 will buy a lot more groceries than $1, which won't buy more than one item in most stores, if even that.

That's the trouble with using numbers without any reference to the whole. It might sound impressive if you don't think about it at all, but the moment you compare a number to what it actually represents, the picture is clearer.

Now, I'm very happy that 100+ ministers or pastors are supportive of LGBTQ rights in Tennessee, but I recognize that is an insignificant number in terms of effectiveness toward that goal.

religionnews.com often publishes news stories like this that do not include any perspective to help readers understand what the story really is. I'd never post such a story here. I'd be too embarrassed. There are too many people here who see right through unrepresentative numbers and understand that there is really no story there.



trotsky

(49,533 posts)
49. Hey now, gil doesn't like you pointing out facts.
Mon Mar 25, 2019, 11:23 AM
Mar 2019

It upsets him. You'll get an earful about China now.

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