terça-feira, 18 de julho de 2017

30% dos Britânicos: "Cristo é Extremista, Deve ser Execrado da Sociedade". Mais Extremista que Dalai Lama e Martin Luther King.


Como se definiria alguém que defende casamento entre homem e mulher, que condena o aborto em qualquer circunstância e que condena o deus dinheiro?

Eu sei como se define essa pessoa. Eu sou essa pessoa e sou regularmente chamado de "extremista" ou "controverso".

Os britânicos deixaram claro isso. Quase 30% disseram que Cristo é um "extremista", sendo extremista deve ser execrado da sociedade. Para os britânicos, Cristo é mais extremista que Gandhi, Martin Luther King ou Dalai Lama. Em certo sentido, eles têm razão, Cristo exige muito mais da gente, em forma de amor, do que todos eles, sendo assim, mais extremista. 

Mas o problema em definir Cristo como extremista é que o objetivo é afastar os extremistas da sociedade. O governo britânico está tentando definir o que é extremismo. Não conseguirá, obviamente, pois se tem uma sociedade que chama Cristo de extremista.

Vejamos relato da pesquisa do The Catholic Herald.

Poll: Nearly one in three Britons think Christ was an ‘extremist’
Christians are increasingly concerned about government plans to crack down on “non-violent extremism” after an opinion poll found that nearly a third of people said Jesus Christ was an “extremist”.
The poll carried out by ComRes for the Evangelical Alliance also found that nearly half of the people interviewed believed that it was extremism to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman only.
Dr David Landrum, director of advocacy for the Evangelical Alliance, which represents some two million Evangelicals, said: “The language of extremism is a recipe for chaos and division.
“This poll shows the scale of moral confusion in our society with the public having no way of deciding whether something is extreme or not.
“It also shows the division that might ensue if the Government persists in trying to use extremism as a way of regulating peaceful ideas in society.
“Detached from terrorism and incitement to violence, extremism does not work as a litmus test for judging peaceful beliefs and opinions.
“Indeed, the Government has tried and failed over the last two years to define extremism with any precision and this poll shows that the public share that confusion.”
In one discovery, the poll of 2,004 people found that 28 per cent considered Jesus Christ to be an extremist.
Thirteen per cent thought that the Dalai Lama could be considered an extremist, 20 per cent said Gandhi could be considered an extremist while 25 per cent thought that Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela could be considered extremists.
A total of 41 per cent of those polled said that people who believed in traditional marriage were extremists.
The poll also found that 48 per cent of people did not think the abolition of the monarchy was extreme, while the same proportion said it was not extreme to give animals the same rights as human beings.
The survey comes just weeks after the Government’s announcement of a Commission for Countering Extremism not only to combat Islamist ideology but also “to support the Government in stamping out extremist ideology in all its forms, both across society and on the internet, so it is denied a safe space to spread”.
The churches have been highly sceptical about the efficacy of a strategy to combat the spread of ideas considered as extremist given the subjective and changing nature of how extremism can be defined.
Some Christian groups have already complained that measures taken to combat the spread of radical Islam have been used as a pretext to impose secularist ideologies on children in church schools.
They fear more interference in Christian institutions and churches if new powers are misused against peaceful organisations that do not share the emerging values of the secular state.
Dr Landrum said: “The Government has failed to define extremism, and the public is clearly divided about which ideas are extremist.
“It therefore seems unlikely that a newly-established quango, such as an extremism commission, will solve such problems.
“It is not wise to foster a society where volatile public opinion can be used to determine what might be extreme or acceptable views.”



2 comentários:

Isac disse...

Não se preocupem, britãnicos blasfemos, que acham o Senhor Jesus um extremista - mas no amor, conforme ideal comentario acima - que o "todo gentilezas" Maomé cuidará de vocês, o qual cada vez mais estende suas redes por sobre o país de ex cristãos desde séculos, nação que preferiu o senhor deus Henrique VIII!
Quem sabe, poderia sentir na pele o mesmo pronunciado pelos judeus, o "caia seu sangue sobre nós"?
Os católicos que os judeus tanto odeiam sem treguas ainda salvaram muitos milhares desses, caso via papa Pio XII na 2ª Grande Guerra!
Aguardem, britãnicos, a cobrança com juros e correção monetaria de blasfemias desse naipe: está às portas!

Anônimo disse...

Não só os britânicos, mas o Ocidente não perde por esperar do tão grande castigo que já está às portas advindas de Deus.
As Sagradas Escrituras fala sobre a apostasia não só da Igreja mas também das autoridades governantes.

Como disse São Pedro: "o mundo está reservado para o fogo".

E fogo o mundo terá!