Jun 24, 2005 01:01
Okay, I just started watching some idiotic chick on television who believes that she can recognize anything with her being a Christian. Curiously, I, mr. do whatever you want, find her too radical. Chief among laws lain out in our cannon is sexual restriction. This idiot, however, does not believe in restricting her sexual activities, yet she calls herself a christian. I say that she is a heretic. She is swept by her passions, and dares to combine her strange sexual beliefs with some quest to end abstinance programming in schools. I say that sex is not that big of a deal. "The stormy blast of hell With restless fury drives the spirit on" (Canto V., lines 32-33, Dante,Trans.Cary). Those who could not quell their passions are sweapt on eternally by a wind. I need not quote the Bible, for it's opinion is given clearly. While I agree with the idiot girl's point, I cannot allow her to go un-mocked. She cannot continue to tout her great Christian beliefs if she does not concede that sexual promiscuity is un-Christian. Now I must apply true logic. If one admits that one does not behave within the Christian laws, she is quite correct in her quest to end abstinance education and replace it with a more complete approach to sex education. THe heretical little idiot is now saying that homosexuals can call themselves Christian. I say that this is perhaps the most evil of her thoughts. Someone once said that Christianity or any religion for that matter is merely one generation away from death. If we allow idiots like this to continue to tear down the very fabrics of religion soon there will be nothing left. Already we see the belief in hell begining to diminish. WHile hell is not especially promenant within the cannon, I say that hell is one of the keystones of our faith. Let all who live know that they stand but a slip and fall from death, for death is always at your side as close as your shadow. Carry yourself with faith and know that hell awaits the whicked. "All hope abandone ye who enter here" (Canot III, ln 9.).