Adultery, fornication, prostitution, and straight men tempted by homer anal rectal sex - everyone would agree that if you want to hide these sins the best place to do it is in a hotel room. Studies with those "black lights" have revealed sexual bodily fluids on just about everything in a hotel room - from sheets, pillow cases, headboards, walls, ceilings, to carpets and towels.
It's hard to say just how many have been Saved® when they reached over to the nightstand to grab a condom or a wallet to pay a prostitute and fell to their knees by the power of the Holy Spirit when their hand touched a Holy Bible (KJV1611). Nonetheless, Jesus was there watching and His word was there to stop the sin, and help the rest of us seeking a clean and sanitary hotel room to take our families to on vacation.
The atheists have been unrelenting in their pursuit to remove Jesus from America, and now are focusing on the one place where those seeking a few minutes of sinful carnal pleasure and debauchery could be Saved® from an eternity in the Lake of Fire.
It's hard to say just how many have been Saved® when they reached over to the nightstand to grab a condom or a wallet to pay a prostitute and fell to their knees by the power of the Holy Spirit when their hand touched a Holy Bible (KJV1611). Nonetheless, Jesus was there watching and His word was there to stop the sin, and help the rest of us seeking a clean and sanitary hotel room to take our families to on vacation.
The atheists have been unrelenting in their pursuit to remove Jesus from America, and now are focusing on the one place where those seeking a few minutes of sinful carnal pleasure and debauchery could be Saved® from an eternity in the Lake of Fire.
Hotel reportedly removes Bibles from rooms after atheist complaint
An atheist organization that has asked private hotels and publicly funded university-owned hotels to remove Bibles from their guest rooms has reportedly convinced the Thunderbird Executive Inn in Glendale, Arizona, to do just that.
Billy Hallowell, Deseret News
An atheist organization that has asked private hotels and publicly funded university-owned hotels to remove Bibles from their guest rooms has reportedly convinced the Thunderbird Executive Inn in Glendale, Arizona, to do just that.
According to a press release from The Freedom From Religion Foundation, an atheist activist group, rooms at the hotel "are now Bible free" after the organization requested their removal.
The sticking point for atheists is that the Thunderbird Executive Inn is located on the premises of the Thunderbird School of Global Management, which recently became a "unit" of Arizona State University, a public college.
With the hotel standing on public land and having an affiliation with the college, the Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a letter dated March 4, 2016, to Allen J. Morrison, CEO and director general of Thunderbird school, urging the removal of the Bibles.
. . .
"Anyone zealous enough to need the Bible as bedtime reading will travel with one," Freedom From Religion Foundation co-president Annie Laurie Gaylor said in a statement. "The rest of us paying guests seek a vacation from proselytizing when we're on vacation."
She continued, "What is offensive at private hotels and motels, however, becomes unconstitutional at public-supported rooms."
While the Freedom From Religion Foundation has focused attention on public university-owned accommodations, the organization has also attempted to get private companies to remove Bibles from rooms.
The central target of their efforts has been Gideons International, a Christian organization that offers free Bibles to hotels. The Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a letter last year to 15 hotel companies asking that the holy book be removed from rooms.
"The Bible calls for killing nonbelievers, apostates, gays, 'stubborn sons' and women who transgress biblical double standards," the group alleged.
The organization warned that secular guests might be offended by the presence of Bibles and encouraged recipients of the letter to "be more hospitable to non-Christian and nonreligious clientele by offering 'Bible-free' rooms."
An atheist organization that has asked private hotels and publicly funded university-owned hotels to remove Bibles from their guest rooms has reportedly convinced the Thunderbird Executive Inn in Glendale, Arizona, to do just that.
Billy Hallowell, Deseret News
An atheist organization that has asked private hotels and publicly funded university-owned hotels to remove Bibles from their guest rooms has reportedly convinced the Thunderbird Executive Inn in Glendale, Arizona, to do just that.
According to a press release from The Freedom From Religion Foundation, an atheist activist group, rooms at the hotel "are now Bible free" after the organization requested their removal.
The sticking point for atheists is that the Thunderbird Executive Inn is located on the premises of the Thunderbird School of Global Management, which recently became a "unit" of Arizona State University, a public college.
With the hotel standing on public land and having an affiliation with the college, the Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a letter dated March 4, 2016, to Allen J. Morrison, CEO and director general of Thunderbird school, urging the removal of the Bibles.
. . .
"Anyone zealous enough to need the Bible as bedtime reading will travel with one," Freedom From Religion Foundation co-president Annie Laurie Gaylor said in a statement. "The rest of us paying guests seek a vacation from proselytizing when we're on vacation."
She continued, "What is offensive at private hotels and motels, however, becomes unconstitutional at public-supported rooms."
While the Freedom From Religion Foundation has focused attention on public university-owned accommodations, the organization has also attempted to get private companies to remove Bibles from rooms.
The central target of their efforts has been Gideons International, a Christian organization that offers free Bibles to hotels. The Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a letter last year to 15 hotel companies asking that the holy book be removed from rooms.
"The Bible calls for killing nonbelievers, apostates, gays, 'stubborn sons' and women who transgress biblical double standards," the group alleged.
The organization warned that secular guests might be offended by the presence of Bibles and encouraged recipients of the letter to "be more hospitable to non-Christian and nonreligious clientele by offering 'Bible-free' rooms."
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