New Church Life Jan/Feb 2014 | Page 96

new church life: jan uary / february 201 4 never as essential and living as the truths of genuine doctrine are. Part of the difference between dogma and doctrine is the way in which they are presented and taught. Dogmas, obviously, are “dogmatic.” Doctrines may be stated dogmatically (in which case they become dogmas); and dogmas may be taught with an appeal to reason and understanding (in which case they take on something of the quality of doctrine). The New Church does not have dogmas; it has doctrines, which are taught with respect for an individual’s free will, reason and conscience. Or at least they should be – if they ever are not, then the way they are being taught is contrary to the whole spirit of the Church. (WEO) protecting obscenity – but not prayer A recent letter writer to The Wall Street Journal noted: “The [United States] Supreme Court is considering . . . whether prayers before meetings of public officials, led most often by Christians, amount to an unconstitutional government endorsement of religion. “A same-day book review of Whitney Strub’s Obscenity Rules describes the Supreme Court’s snaking path to protection of obscenity as a First Amendment right. Mr. Strub presents the obscenity legal battle as one between sophisticated liberal minds supporting free expression and repressive conservative minds that are closed and moralistic.” The letter writer cited several instances of “protected” artistic expression, funded by the taxpayer-supported National Endowment for the Arts, such as “The Holy Virgin Mary” – a Madonna adorned with elephant dung and sexually explicit photos. He concluded: “If sophisticated liberal minds dictate that Christians accept (and pay for) deeply offensive, anti-Christian imagery, it seems reasonable that atheists and Wiccans could cover their ears during brief legislative prayers reflecting beliefs held by the majority of Americans. To rule that our founders favored protection of pornography but not public prayer is patently absurd.” Amen. (BMH) sophisticated minds “Sophisticated minds” generally are considered intellectual, worldly-wise, above the thinking of the common man. Indeed, educated, sophisticated people help us to understand and appreciate art, music and literature. There is nothing wrong with sophistication – in its place. But sophistication often is used to imply wisdom. Many “sophisticates” 92