06 May 2014

Gubs for the day


Josh Sanburn has a Time article about the conflict between gubs and religion in Georgia:
Some church leaders are advising parishioners not to bring guns to services, after Governor Nathan Deal signed what critics call the "guns everywhere" law. Critics include Robert Wright, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta, Georgia, who sent an open letter to 56,000 members that make up the dozens of Episcopal churches throughout north Georgia with a simple message: Don’t bring guns into the house of God.
The week before, Governor Deal signed into law one of the most sweeping gun bills in recent memory. The Safe Carry Protection Act of 2014, which goes into effect on 1 July, allows Georgia residents with concealed carry permits to bring guns into churches that give express permission, while lowering the fine for bringing a gun into a place of worship to a hundred dollars. It permits guns in bars, school zones, government buildings, and certain areas inside airports. It says the state no longer has to fingerprint law-abiding gun owners to renew their licenses, and that dealers won’t be required to keep sales records for state purposes (though Federal government record-keeping laws still apply). The NRA has called it “the most comprehensive pro-gun bill in state history”. Opponents have derided it as the “guns everywhere” bill.
But those guns won’t be everywhere. The new law has largely split the state’s Christian denominations between the Georgia Baptist Convention, which supports the bill, and Episcopal and Catholic leaders in the Atlanta area, who have strongly come out against it, and expressly told their congregants to leave their guns out of the pews.
Jesus did not preach a gospel of self-protection, a gospel of live by the sword, die by the sword,” Wright says. “Quite the opposite.” Wright says that, while he understands the need for Second Amendment protections for those wanting firearms for self-defense or for sport, he sees the very idea of guns in church as blasphemous. “Weapons in a place of sanctuary seem to me to be inconsistent with a God of love,” he says. “The prince of peace isn’t spelled P-I-E-C-E. It’s P-E-A-C-E.”
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta issued similar guidelines last week for its parishes, which encompass 69 counties throughout Georgia. “The last thing we need is more firearms in public places, especially in those places frequented by children and the vulnerable,” Archbishop Wilton Gregory wrote in the 1 May  2014issue of the Georgia Bulletin.
The Georgia Baptist Convention, made up of 3,600 Baptist churches throughout the state, lobbied on behalf of the bill, largely because it gives its churches more autonomy, allowing each to determine on their own whether to allow firearms. “We think it’s important that churches be able to make their own decisions,” says Mike Griffin, a pastor and lobbyist for the Georgia Baptist ConventionGriffin says that, while other denominations often determine policies from the top down, Baptists historically operate from a church-up approach, and the gun bill recognizes that sort of decision-making.
State Representative Alan Powell, a co-sponsor of Georgia’s gun bill, says the law was written with those churches in mind and has no problems with churches banning guns.
“That’s their business,” Representative Powell says. “But we had numerous churches testify about wanting to protect themselves from criminal elements. At times, when they’re counting tithes, for example, deacons weren’t allowed to carry a weapon.”
But Bishop Wright (photo) says he believes most people of faith in Georgia don’t want guns on church property. And it’s not just Christians. He says he’s heard from Muslim and Jewish leaders as well who oppose it, citing about two hundred other religious leaders who have publicly spoken out against the bill. “I don’t know how you reconcile Jesus, who says, ‘Love they neighbor, love thy enemy’ and, at the same time, being armed to the teeth,” Wright says.
Rico says this isn't over...

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