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The primary point of my first book, The End of Secularism, was to demonstrate that secularism doesn’t do what it claims to do, which is to solve the problem of religious difference.  As I look at the  administration’s attempt to mandate that religious employers pay for contraceptive products, I see that they have confirmed one of my charges in the book.

I wrote that secularists claim that they are occupying a neutral position in the public square, but in reality they are simply another group of contenders working to implement a vision of community life with which they are comfortable.  And guess what?  They are not comfortable with many of the fundamental beliefs of Christians.  Regrettably, many secularists are also statists.  Thus, their discomfort with Christian beliefs results in direct challenges to them in the form of mandatory public policy.

Collectivism is often very appealing to Christians who want to do good for their neighbors.  Unfortunately, collectivism is frequently a fellow-traveler of aggressive secularism with little respect for religious liberty.  The veil has slipped.  I hope we do not too quickly forget what was revealed in that moment.  Collectivism gives.  But it also takes.  And what it takes is very often precious and irreplaceable.

View all comments (2) |

fckewe| 2.15.12 @ 3:01PM

and anonymous jabbering is free speech.

Mark Long| 2.15.12 @ 8:07PM

F. A. von Hayek called it the "Road to Serfdom." I would take it one step further: collectivism leads to enslavement--or the equivalent.
By that standard, Obamacare is unconstitutional on the basis of the Thirteenth Amendment which outlawed slavery and "involuntary servitude." If the government can force one to enter into a private contract against one's wishes then one is not only no longer free but also no longer controls one's own destiny.
This is the inevitable outcome of statism, socialism, communism, fascism, collectivism, progressivism, or any of the other labels by which it is described. And they are all the same thing in their essentials: overbearing centralized power at the price of individual liberty and responsibility.
The scary thing about the modern varieties in the west is that they are so insidious and deceptive that people often do not realize their fate until it is too late.

More Blog Posts by Hunter Baker

http://spectator.org/blog/2012/02/15/the-end-of-secularism-and-the

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