Trump Administration Just Sued This State Over Benefits for Illegal Immigrants
Trump Administration Announces Huge Action Against Somali Fraudsters
Tim Walz Isn't Happy About Trump Cutting Off Childcare Funding
ACLJ Taking Landmark Case Against CNN to U.S. Supreme Court
CNN Panelists Melt Down After Scott Jennings Uses The Left’s Favorite Show Against...
Tim Walz, Keith Ellison Invited to Testify at GOP Oversight Committee Hearing on...
The Heckler Awards, Part 5 – The Continued Celebration of the Bottom of...
The FBI Just Released Docs About the Nashville School Shooter Proving Her Hate-Filled...
WI Governor Tony Evers Said 2025 Was the 'Year of the Kid.' Here's...
'Systemic Fraud:' HUD Secretary Turner Says Questionable Rent Assistance Payments Weren't...
Exclusive: Alaska AG Stephen Cox Presses Alaska Airlines on Policies That May Hinder...
Here's How Many Starbucks Stores Closed in 2025
Nick Shirley Showed Us What Journalism Looks Like. Now CNN Is Attacking His...
Colombia's President Says US Attack on Venezuela Targeted Commie Narco-Terrorists
Border Patrol Head Greg Bovino Shuts Down 'Clown' Democrat Politician for Choosing Illegal...
OPINION

Hiding from the Cross Like Dracula

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

I try to make it a practice to vet the circulating-emails I receive before I forward them on. I think one of the best sources to vet email rumors is truthorfiction.com. They seem to lack a political bias one way or another, and they are discerning in terms of religious rumors. They don't throw the baby out with the bathwater---particularly the baby in the manger.

Advertisement

The other day I received an email that I thought worth checking out. It claimed that in a chapel in a VA hospital, administrators had covered up Christian symbols because of a federal order to do so. In the chapel.

But I checked this out with truthorfiction.com, and there it was labeled as "Truth!"

The rumor-clearinghouse notes of the VA hospital in Iron Mountain, Michigan: "The hospital was told that Christian symbols, statues and religious items inside the chapel were no longer permitted. This according to a June 3, 2014, article by Christian Today."

Truthorfiction.com went on to observe, "In order to comply with the regulation statues, crucifix and an altar 'were encircled with a curtain at the Iron Mountain chapel after an inspection by the National Chaplain Center discovered the unauthorized items.'"

The policy went into effect in 2008, and under the Obama Administration since 2009, things have only gotten worse.

I remember when Obama spoke at Georgetown one time, and he demanded that they cover over "IHS" in the background in that Catholic building.

I'll bet 90% of Christians don't even know what IHS stands for. I had to take New Testament Greek to find out myself. “HIS” are the first three letters in the Greek language of Jesus: Iota, Eta, and Sigma. The English equivalent would be "J-E-S." It simply means Jesus.

It would appear that some in our government today seem to follow the ABC principle---Anything But Christ. Like Dracula, they recoil at the sight of the cross.

Advertisement

Related:

CHRISTIANS CHURCH

America's founders gave us freedom of religion. Liberals today like to limit that liberty to “freedom of worship.” Yet apparently at services at the VA chapels, even the freedom to truly worship has been truncated.

To what God are they allowed to pray? "To Whom It May Concern"? What an insult to the Christian veterans of whatever stripe. No one is forcing anyone to bow down to that cross in the chapel or to worship the God of the cross.

How far we have fallen as a nation. When he was in Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, General George Washington insisted on hiring military chaplains systematically. Here were paid Christian clergymen to pray and serve the troops in an explicitly Christian way.

But leftists today take "the separation of church and state" to ridiculous lengths. They often do this in the name of Thomas Jefferson.

A letter written January 1, 1802 by Thomas Jefferson is the source of the phrase "a wall of separation between Church and State." He wrote this to the Danbury Baptists, who cheered him on as president and as a champion of religious freedom.

They closed their letter, "And may the Lord preserve you safe from every evil and bring you at last to his Heavenly Kingdom through Jesus Christ our Glorious Mediator."

Jefferson's obscure letter of reply changed history because in 1947, the U.S. Supreme Court took it as the Rosetta Stone of the First Amendment. No longer was that first right in our Bill of Rights understood to mean, "In these United States, there would be no national denomination" (which is what it actually intended).

Advertisement

Now, instead, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion…" meant that a strict wall separating church and state was to be built.

Ironically, if the liberals were right, Jefferson violated the separation of church and state in the very letter that gave us the separation of church and state, since he closes his reply with this: "I reciprocate your kind prayers for the protection and blessing of the common Father and Creator of man, and tender you for yourselves and your religious association, assurances of my high respect and esteem." Prayer? To God? By a president?

We seem to have a case of national amnesia today. And that can be seen by what apparently is not seen in some of our VA hospital chapels of late.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement