"New York Judge Sol Wachtler said in 1985, 'If a district attorney wanted, a grand jury would indict a ham sandwich.'
Grand juries are the prosecutor’s babies. They decide who gets picked, what evidence gets presented, and what gets left out. There’s no judge, no defense attorney, and generally a defendant only testifies in rare circumstances — his story is so air tight that there’s no down side in putting him in." https://abovethelaw.com/2016/02/criminally-yours-indicting-a-ham-sandwich/
Isn't this what most of us have done, listen to one viewpoint from the pulpit, year after year? The Merriam-Webster has an interesting paragraph on propaganda:
"Propaganda is today most often used in reference to political statements, but the word comes to our language through its use in a religious context. The Congregatio de propaganda fide (“Congregation for propagating the faith”) was an organization established in 1622 by Pope Gregory XV as a means of furthering Catholic missionary activity. The word propaganda is from the ablative singular feminine of propogandus, which is the gerundive of the Latin propagare, meaning “to propagate.” The first use of the word propaganda (without the rest of the Latin title) in English was in reference to this Catholic organization. It was not until the beginning of the 19th century that it began to be used as a term denoting ideas or information that are of questionable accuracy as a means of advancing a cause."
Shouldn't we consider the wisdom of the Proverbs?
"The one who first states a case seems right, until the other comes and cross-examines." (Prov 18:17, NRSV)
How do we "cross-examine" our Pastor? We can read commentaries online from other denominations and consider the arguments made, how the Scriptures are brought to bear on particular points of doctrine. Often the importance of Proverbs 18:17 is seen clearly.
"I did not listen to the voice of my teachers or incline my ear to my instructors. Now I am at the point of utter ruin in the public assembly.” (Prov 5:13-14, NRSV)
It is clear that the words "teachers" and "instructors" are plural so we can compare and cross-examine across sectarian lines.
The 14th Edition of the Handbook of Denominations in the US, copyright 2018, lists over 200 distinct Christian denominations that are 'alive and well' today. Do all of them teach biblical "truth"? I narrowed my cross-examination sources to the major denominations that were here at the founding of our country, the USA, which God has blessed so much. It would be advisable to avoid the groups that began appearing in the 1800s and later.
Grand juries are the prosecutor’s babies. They decide who gets picked, what evidence gets presented, and what gets left out. There’s no judge, no defense attorney, and generally a defendant only testifies in rare circumstances — his story is so air tight that there’s no down side in putting him in." https://abovethelaw.com/2016/02/criminally-yours-indicting-a-ham-sandwich/
Isn't this what most of us have done, listen to one viewpoint from the pulpit, year after year? The Merriam-Webster has an interesting paragraph on propaganda:
"Propaganda is today most often used in reference to political statements, but the word comes to our language through its use in a religious context. The Congregatio de propaganda fide (“Congregation for propagating the faith”) was an organization established in 1622 by Pope Gregory XV as a means of furthering Catholic missionary activity. The word propaganda is from the ablative singular feminine of propogandus, which is the gerundive of the Latin propagare, meaning “to propagate.” The first use of the word propaganda (without the rest of the Latin title) in English was in reference to this Catholic organization. It was not until the beginning of the 19th century that it began to be used as a term denoting ideas or information that are of questionable accuracy as a means of advancing a cause."
Shouldn't we consider the wisdom of the Proverbs?
"The one who first states a case seems right, until the other comes and cross-examines." (Prov 18:17, NRSV)
How do we "cross-examine" our Pastor? We can read commentaries online from other denominations and consider the arguments made, how the Scriptures are brought to bear on particular points of doctrine. Often the importance of Proverbs 18:17 is seen clearly.
"I did not listen to the voice of my teachers or incline my ear to my instructors. Now I am at the point of utter ruin in the public assembly.” (Prov 5:13-14, NRSV)
It is clear that the words "teachers" and "instructors" are plural so we can compare and cross-examine across sectarian lines.
The 14th Edition of the Handbook of Denominations in the US, copyright 2018, lists over 200 distinct Christian denominations that are 'alive and well' today. Do all of them teach biblical "truth"? I narrowed my cross-examination sources to the major denominations that were here at the founding of our country, the USA, which God has blessed so much. It would be advisable to avoid the groups that began appearing in the 1800s and later.
- 1
- Show all