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  • Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

    Humanists (that is, atheist God-mockers who don't like to be called "atheists") have decided that removing the Ten Commandments from public schools just isn't enough. No, they want to have their own "Ten Commitments" posted instead.

    Naturally, they say nothing about obeying God, or about avoiding fornication or idolatry or working on the Sabbath. Nope.

    And worst of all, they're begging people to "endorse" these "Commitments".

    Ten Commitments
    Guiding Principles for Teaching Values in America's Public Schools


    Altruism

    Altruism is the unselfish concern for the welfare of others without expectation of reward, recognition, or return. Opportunities for acts of altruism are everywhere in the family, the classroom, the school, and the wider community. Think of examples of altruistic acts in your experience. What person-to-person and group projects, classroom and school-wide activities, and community service projects might you and your students undertake?

    Caring for the World Around Us

    Everyone can and ought to play a role in caring for the Earth and its inhabitants. We can directly experience the living things in our homes and neighborhoods like trees, flowers, birds, insects, and pets. Gradually we expand our neighborhood. We learn about deserts and oceans, rivers and forests, the wild life around us and the wild life elsewhere. We learn that we are dependent on each other, on the natural world, and all that lives in it for food and shelter, space and beauty.

    Critical Thinking

    We gain reliable knowledge because we are able to observe, report, experiment, and analyze what goes on around us. We also learn to raise questions that are clear and precise, to gather information, and to reason about the information we receive in a way that tests it for truthfulness, accuracy, and utility. From our earliest years we learn how to think and to share and challenge our ideas and the ideas of others, and consider their consequences. Practice asking “what next?” and “why?” and “how do I/you/we know that?”

    Empathy

    We human beings are capable of empathy, the ability to understand and enter imaginatively into another living being’s feelings, the sad ones and the happy ones as well. Many of the personal relationships we have (in the family, among friends, between diverse individuals, and amid other living things) are made positive through empathy. With discussion and role-playing, we can learn how other people feel when they are sad or hurt or ignored, as well as when they experience great joys. We can use stories, anecdotes, and classroom events to help us nurture sensitivity to how our actions impact others.

    Ethical Development

    Questions of fairness, cooperation, and sharing are among the first moral issues we encounter in our ethical development as human beings. Ethical education is ongoing implicitly and explicitly in what is called the “hidden curriculum” that we experience through the media, the family, and the community. Ethics can be taught through discussion, role-playing, story telling, and other activities that improve analysis and decision-making regarding what's good and bad, right and wrong.

    Global Awareness

    We live in a world that is rich in cultural, social, and individual diversity, a world where interdependence is increasing rapidly so that events anywhere are more likely to have consequences everywhere. Much can be done to prepare the next generation for accepting the responsibility of global citizenship. Understanding can be gained regarding the many communities in which we live through history, anthropology, and biology. A linguistic, ethnic, and cultural diversity are present in the classroom and provide lessons of diversity and commonality. We help others reach understanding about the interconnectedness of the welfare of all humanity.

    Human Rights

    Human rights is the idea that people should have rights just because they are human beings. These rights are universal. That is, they are for everyone no matter what their race, religion, ethnicity, nationality, age, sex, political beliefs, intelligence, disability, sexual orientation, or gender identity. School projects can be undertaken to learn about human rights, such as interviewing people who have once or are now participating in various rights movements. Student courts can introduce the idea and practice of due process, a key component of human rights.

    Peace and Social Justice

    A curriculum that values and fosters peace education would promote understanding, tolerance, and friendship among nations as well as among cultural and religious or philosophical groups. Education should include opportunities to learn about the United Nations’ role in preventing conflict as well as efforts to achieve social justice here in the United States. Students should learn about problems of injustice including what can be done to prevent and respond to them with meaningful actions that promote peace and social justice both at home and abroad.

    Responsibility

    Our behavior is morally responsible when we tell the truth, help someone in trouble, and live up to promises we've made. Our behavior is legally responsible when we obey a just law and meet the requirements of membership or citizenship. But we also have a larger responsibility to be a caring member of our family, our community, and our world. Stories and role-playing can help students understand responsibility and its absence or failure. We learn from answering such questions as: What happens when we live in accordance with fair and just rules? What happens when we don’t? What happens when the rules are unjust?

    Service and Participation

    Life’s fulfillment can emerge from an individual’s participation in the service of humane ideals. School-based service-learning combines community service objectives and learning objectives with the intent that the activities change both the recipient and the provider. It provides students with the ability to identify important issues in real-life situations. Through these efforts we learn that each of us can help meet the needs of others and of ourselves. Through our lifetime, we learn over and over again of our mutual dependence.
    Bible boring? Nonsense!
    Try Bible in a Year with Brother V, or join Shirlee and the kids as they discuss Real Bible Stories!
    You can't be a Christian if you don't know God's Word!

  • #2
    Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

    I'll tell you one thing; and this thing is just between you and I Rev. Rodimer...

    I'd like to see one of those humansits tarred, feathered and set on fire as they float down the fucking Mississippi on a wooden plank. I'm a man. I got rights too don't I ????

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

      What a bunch of liberal joo crap. These secular God haters just make me sick. All they ever think about is peeing in Christ's cornflakes. They won't be feeling so damned clever down in the lake of fire.
      Who Will Jesus Damn?

      Here is a partial list from just a few scripture verses:

      Hypocrites (Matthew 24:51), The Unforgiving (Mark 11:26), Homosexuals (Romans 1:26, 27), Fornicators (Romans 1:29), The Wicked (Romans 1:29), The Covetous (Romans 1:29), The Malicious (Romans 1:29), The Envious (Romans 1:29), Murderers (Romans 1:29), The Deceitful (Romans 1:29), Backbiters (Romans 1:30), Haters of God (Romans 1:30), The Despiteful (Romans 1:30), The Proud (Romans 1:30), Boasters (Romans 1:30), Inventors of evil (Romans 1:30), Disobedient to parents (Romans 1:30), Covenant breakers (Romans 1:31), The Unmerciful (Romans 1:31), The Implacable (Romans 1:31), The Unrighteous (1Corinthians 6:9), Idolaters (1Corinthians 6:9), Adulterers (1Corinthians 6:9), The Effeminate (1Corinthians 6:9), Thieves (1Corinthians 6:10), Drunkards (1Corinthians 6:10), Reviler (1Corinthians 6:10), Extortioners (1Corinthians 6:10), The Fearful (Revelation 21:8), The Unbelieving (Revelation 21:8), The Abominable (Revelation 21:8), Whoremongers (Revelation 21:8), Sorcerers (Revelation 21:8), All Liars (Revelation 21:8)

      Need Pastoral Advice? Contact me privately at PastorEzekiel@landoverbaptist.net TODAY!!

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

        Originally posted by Deaner View Post
        I'll tell you one thing; and this thing is just between you and I Rev. Rodimer...

        I'd like to see one of those humansits tarred, feathered and set on fire as they float down the fucking Mississippi on a wooden plank. I'm a man. I got rights too don't I ????


        So . . . I guess you'll be working extra hard to get President Romney in power with a Teavangelist House and Senate, right?
        Bible boring? Nonsense!
        Try Bible in a Year with Brother V, or join Shirlee and the kids as they discuss Real Bible Stories!
        You can't be a Christian if you don't know God's Word!

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

          They basically just copied the nine satanic statements from LaVey's satanic bible.
          1. Satan represents indulgence instead of abstinence!
          2. Satan represents vital existence instead of spiritual pipe dreams!
          3. Satan represents undefiled wisdom instead of hypocritical self-deceit!
          4. Satan represents kindness to those who deserve it instead of love wasted on ingrates!
          5. Satan represents vengeance instead of turning the other cheek!
          6. Satan represents responsibility to the responsible instead of concern for psychic vampires!
          7. Satan represents man as just another animal, sometimes better, more often worse than those that walk on all-fours, who, because of his “divine spiritual and intellectual development,” has become the most vicious animal of all!
          8. Satan represents all of the so-called sins, as they all lead to physical, mental, or emotional gratification!

          9. Satan has been the best friend the Church has ever had, as He has kept it in business all these years!
          They must have added one but I didn't bother to read close enough to figure out which one.
          May you be a blessing to every life you touch.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

            It turns out the queers are mocking God's big 10 too!

            The Gay 10 Commandments


            I. Thou shalt have no other studs before me unless I get to f*** them too.

            II. Thou shalt not make of thee a Tammy Faye image.

            III. Thou shalt not take the name of Cher, thy God, in vain.

            IV. Remember thy shopping days, to keep them holy.

            V. Honour thy Abercrombe and thy Fitch.

            VI. Thou shalt not fill thy stomach with fattening foods.

            VII. Thou presently cannot commit real adultery.

            VIII. Thou shalt not steal a female’s boyfriend.

            IX. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour unless it is REALLY juicy gossip.

            X. Thou shalt covet any thing that is thy neighbour’s, unless it is a Hawaiian shirt.
            Who Will Jesus Damn?

            Here is a partial list from just a few scripture verses:

            Hypocrites (Matthew 24:51), The Unforgiving (Mark 11:26), Homosexuals (Romans 1:26, 27), Fornicators (Romans 1:29), The Wicked (Romans 1:29), The Covetous (Romans 1:29), The Malicious (Romans 1:29), The Envious (Romans 1:29), Murderers (Romans 1:29), The Deceitful (Romans 1:29), Backbiters (Romans 1:30), Haters of God (Romans 1:30), The Despiteful (Romans 1:30), The Proud (Romans 1:30), Boasters (Romans 1:30), Inventors of evil (Romans 1:30), Disobedient to parents (Romans 1:30), Covenant breakers (Romans 1:31), The Unmerciful (Romans 1:31), The Implacable (Romans 1:31), The Unrighteous (1Corinthians 6:9), Idolaters (1Corinthians 6:9), Adulterers (1Corinthians 6:9), The Effeminate (1Corinthians 6:9), Thieves (1Corinthians 6:10), Drunkards (1Corinthians 6:10), Reviler (1Corinthians 6:10), Extortioners (1Corinthians 6:10), The Fearful (Revelation 21:8), The Unbelieving (Revelation 21:8), The Abominable (Revelation 21:8), Whoremongers (Revelation 21:8), Sorcerers (Revelation 21:8), All Liars (Revelation 21:8)

            Need Pastoral Advice? Contact me privately at PastorEzekiel@landoverbaptist.net TODAY!!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

              Brothers in Christ!

              On the one hand it makes me very sad to read this kind of stuff but on the other hand it WILL make me happy someday! I'm talking about the day all of these Jesus-mockers will burn in hell!

              And they definitly will as they are replacing the Ten Commandments by some phrases which are completely out of touch with reality.

              Exodus 20:3
              Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
              And they DO have other gods as Jesus would NEVER say stupid things like "think critically". The bible tells us to trust and to believe!


              Proverbs 3:5-6
              Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths.
              YIC
              Pater Doit
              And Joschuah begot Jonah and Jonah begot Issiron and Issiron begot Aaron. So the Lord sent a great flood.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                Now I am being told that the filthy savage injuns have mocked the Holy Bible by making their own set of commandments! Will the blasphemy never stop?!

                The Ten Native American Commandments


                1. Treat the Earth and all that dwell thereon with respect.


                2. Remain close to the Great Spirit, in all that you do.

                3. Show great respect for your fellow beings.
                (Especially Respect yourself)

                4. Work together for the benefit of all Mankind.

                5. Give assistance and kindness wherever needed.

                6. Do what you know to be right.
                (But be careful not to fall into self-righteousness)

                7. Look after the well being of mind and body.

                8. Dedicate a share of your efforts to the greater good.

                9. Be truthful and honest at all times.
                (Especially be truthful and honest with your self)

                10. Take full responsibility for your actions
                Who Will Jesus Damn?

                Here is a partial list from just a few scripture verses:

                Hypocrites (Matthew 24:51), The Unforgiving (Mark 11:26), Homosexuals (Romans 1:26, 27), Fornicators (Romans 1:29), The Wicked (Romans 1:29), The Covetous (Romans 1:29), The Malicious (Romans 1:29), The Envious (Romans 1:29), Murderers (Romans 1:29), The Deceitful (Romans 1:29), Backbiters (Romans 1:30), Haters of God (Romans 1:30), The Despiteful (Romans 1:30), The Proud (Romans 1:30), Boasters (Romans 1:30), Inventors of evil (Romans 1:30), Disobedient to parents (Romans 1:30), Covenant breakers (Romans 1:31), The Unmerciful (Romans 1:31), The Implacable (Romans 1:31), The Unrighteous (1Corinthians 6:9), Idolaters (1Corinthians 6:9), Adulterers (1Corinthians 6:9), The Effeminate (1Corinthians 6:9), Thieves (1Corinthians 6:10), Drunkards (1Corinthians 6:10), Reviler (1Corinthians 6:10), Extortioners (1Corinthians 6:10), The Fearful (Revelation 21:8), The Unbelieving (Revelation 21:8), The Abominable (Revelation 21:8), Whoremongers (Revelation 21:8), Sorcerers (Revelation 21:8), All Liars (Revelation 21:8)

                Need Pastoral Advice? Contact me privately at PastorEzekiel@landoverbaptist.net TODAY!!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                  Blasphemy goes on
                  10 Commandments of Mormons


                  1: Thou shalt be a Mormon.

                  2: Thou shalt stay awake in church.

                  3: Thou shalt read a lot of Mormon humor books.

                  4: Thou shalt have the gift of humor discernment.

                  5: Thou shalt practice Mormon humor often.

                  6: Thou shalt be slightly irreverent — no more, no less.

                  7: Thou shalt not curse unless quoting scripture or a general authority.

                  8: Thou shalt not laugh at other people.

                  9: Thou shalt laugh at thyself.

                  10: Thou shalt be funny.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                    Originally posted by Rev. M. Rodimer View Post
                    I could be being very naive here but that all looks to me like a manual of how to hate God and embrace the slippery, gangly arms of some arch-bender pervert who has designs on the rectal arena of the young fresh faced, flaxan haired, coyly smiling young youths that Satan has his eye on but seek sanctuary in the heady embrace of the Lord.

                    Colour me unimpressed.

                    YIC
                    1 Corinthians 11:3 But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.

                    Revelation 22:15 For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.

                    Leviticus 20:13 If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                      Replacing God's Ten Commandments is to replace objective right and wrong and put anything we want in its place.

                      Why, a pervert could make laws like, "Thou shalt have a Thai rent boy for use," or something more ridiculous, like: "Thou shalt follow science." We can replace God's commandments with anything at all--the result of which would be chaos!

                      God help us!

                      Pastor Ed

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                        The atheistic 10 commandments of philosophy are a new outrage against Jesus.



                        Ten Commandments of Philosophy


                        1. Allow the Spirit of wonder to flourish in your heart. Philosophy begins with deep wonder about the universe, about who we are, where we come from, and where we are going. What is this life all about? Speculate and explore different points of view and worldviews. Do not stifle childlike curiosity.

                        2. Doubt everything unsupported by evidence until the evidence convinces you of its truth. Be reasonably cautious, a moderate skeptic, suspicious of those who claim to have the truth. Doubt is the souls purgative. Do not fear intellectual inquiry. As Goethe said the masses fear the intellectual, but it is stupidity they should fear, if they only realised how dangerous it really is.

                        3. Love the Truth. "Philosophy is the eternal search for truth, a search which inevitably fails and yet is never defeated; which continually eludes us, but which always guides us. This free, intellectual life of the mind is the noblest inheritance of the Western World; it is also the hope of our future." (W. T. Jones)

                        4. Divide and Conquer. Divide each problem and theory into its smallest essential components in order to analyze each unit carefully. This is the analytic method.

                        5. Collect and Construct. Build a coherent argument or theory from component parts. One should move from the simple, secure foundations to the complex and comprehensive in the manner of Bertrand Russell that we mentioned earlier. The important thing is to have a coherent , well founded, tightly reasoned set of beliefs that can withstand the opposition.

                        6. Conjecture and Refute. Make a complete survey of possible objections to your position, looking for counter-examples and subtle mistakes. Following a suggestion of Karl Popper, philosophy is a system of conjecture and refutation. Seek bold hypotheses and seek disconformations of your favourite positions. In this way, by a process of elimination, you will negatively, indirectly and gradually approach the Truth.

                        7. Revise and Rebuild. Be willing to revise, reject, and modify your beliefs and the degree with which your hold any belief. Acknowledge that you probably have many false beliefs and be grateful to those who correct you. This is the principle of fallibilism, the thesis that we are very likely incorrect in many of our beliefs and have a tendency towards self-deception when considering objections to our position.

                        8. Seek Simplicity. This is the principle of parsimony, also known as "Occam's Razor". Prefer the simpler explanation to the more complex, all things being equal. Of course, all things are not always equal. Sometimes the truth is complex, but where to explanations are of relatively equal merit, prefer the simpler.

                        9. Live the Truth. Appropriate your ideas in a personal way, so that even as the Objective Truth is a correspondence of the thought to the world, this Lived Truth will be a correspondance of the life to the thought. As Kierkegaard said, "Here is a definition of [subjective] truth: holding fast to an objective uncertainty in an appropriation process of the most passionate inwardness is the truth, the highest truth available for an existing individual."

                        10. Live the Good! Let the practical conclusions of a philosophical reflection on the moral life inspire and motivate you to action. Let moral truth transform your life so that you shine like a jewel in its own light amid the darkness of ignorance.
                        Who Will Jesus Damn?

                        Here is a partial list from just a few scripture verses:

                        Hypocrites (Matthew 24:51), The Unforgiving (Mark 11:26), Homosexuals (Romans 1:26, 27), Fornicators (Romans 1:29), The Wicked (Romans 1:29), The Covetous (Romans 1:29), The Malicious (Romans 1:29), The Envious (Romans 1:29), Murderers (Romans 1:29), The Deceitful (Romans 1:29), Backbiters (Romans 1:30), Haters of God (Romans 1:30), The Despiteful (Romans 1:30), The Proud (Romans 1:30), Boasters (Romans 1:30), Inventors of evil (Romans 1:30), Disobedient to parents (Romans 1:30), Covenant breakers (Romans 1:31), The Unmerciful (Romans 1:31), The Implacable (Romans 1:31), The Unrighteous (1Corinthians 6:9), Idolaters (1Corinthians 6:9), Adulterers (1Corinthians 6:9), The Effeminate (1Corinthians 6:9), Thieves (1Corinthians 6:10), Drunkards (1Corinthians 6:10), Reviler (1Corinthians 6:10), Extortioners (1Corinthians 6:10), The Fearful (Revelation 21:8), The Unbelieving (Revelation 21:8), The Abominable (Revelation 21:8), Whoremongers (Revelation 21:8), Sorcerers (Revelation 21:8), All Liars (Revelation 21:8)

                        Need Pastoral Advice? Contact me privately at PastorEzekiel@landoverbaptist.net TODAY!!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Humanists mock Ten Commandments with "ten commitments"

                          The atheists have even gone so far as to defame something as glorious as bacon with their anti-christian hatred:

                          I. Never ever cook bacon naked. Unless you enjoy a hot grease drum roll on your (deleted due to Christian sensibilities)

                          II. Bacon makes everything better.

                          III. Tho shalt always consume bacon on the Sabbath, the Mondath, the Tuesdath, the Wednesdath, the Thursdath, the Fridath and Saturdath.

                          IV. 96.4% of the worlds problems can be solved by simply wrapping bacon around it

                          V. There are two types of people in this world, those who love bacon and those who will be sacrificed first during the zombie apocalypse

                          VI. Meals without bacon are really eaten sand are the leading cause of divorce in America

                          VII. If your computer or laptop is running slow, simply open your disc drive, lay three strips of bacon in it and close. Your computer speed will increase by 6.

                          VIII. Bacon drastically inreases [sic] the life of your fridge. It's been shown that fridges with bacon in them last up to 3 years longer than those that don't.

                          IX. According to most [unlicensed] doctors, bacon is good for you and should be eaten as much as possible.

                          X. Even pigs eat bacon.
                          Apart from all of the clearly anti-christian rhetoric that these "10 commandments" are saying we ought not to indoctrinate the youth in anything but pure Christian values. Its our duty as Americans!
                          Genesis 4:12: When thou tillest the ground, it shall not henceforth yield unto thee her strength; a fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou be in the earth.

                          Numbers 35:19: The revenger of blood himself shall slay the murderer: when he meeteth him, he shall slay him.

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