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Trey #fundie browseatwork.com

[more from Trey, explaining why someone who has been baptised and now is an atheist should have a trial and then be executed]

As i said previously, though, i do not believe that anyone has the right to go around killing people "willy-nilly" (the way Muslims seem to think religion works). What i do think Scripture calls for is a real trial, with a real defense and prosecution. The fact that capital punishment is on the table is not a function of barbarism, but of the seriousness of the crime and its effect on society at large. Those who preach heresies and those who violate their Covenant vows and obligations (like yourself) are in real danger. It is not just a personal decision you are making; it is a decision that affects others, especially if you are encouraging others to abandon the Lord for an atheistic belief system.

Treyfrog #fundie browseatwork.com

[Describing the "inevitable" Christian goverment that will arise]

I believe that all people who are of a different religion should be given the freedom to worship as they see fit. Those, however, who have been born into the Church, who have made Covenant promises and oaths through baptism and the Holy Eucharist, and especially those who have taken special oaths to keep the Church pure from heresies, should be held to a higher standard. Those religions, while they would have freedom to worship as they see fit, they should and would never be given an equal standing with the Christian religion in terms of being able to proselytize and hold public office.

['In your near-Utopian Christian country described above, would I be killed if I 'preached' agnosticism to the masses?']

If you are a citizen (i.e., a baptized member of a Christian Church), and if you refused to repent, then yes.

If you are an alien, you could be deported, jailed, or yes, even executed, if you persisted.