I Don’t Get It

There are a couple of things about the recent elections that truly puzzle me. Perhaps someone out there can enlighten me, or at least give me a little insight.

  • How is it that a state that overwhelmingly re-elected a rather liberal Democrat governor, and just as overwhelmingly rejected his conservative Republican opponent, and nearly elected — with only about a 3% margin — a very liberal Democrat senator, turn around and seriously overwhelmingly approve, with an 80% majority, an amendment to the state constitution that is so incredibly ultra-conservative? I don’t get it. Who are these people?? Is there a whole block of voters out there who only voted for Amendment 1 but not for any of the candidates or any other issues? Or are the people of Tennessee that double-minded; center-to-left leaning in candidates but far-right on issues… Too weird.
  • How did Nancy Pelosi become Speaker of the House just by being re-elected as Congresswoman, and without a vote of the new House? I thought one had to be elected by peers into that office, but she’s de facto Speaker. When was that decided??  Don’t get me wrong, I think its great that a woman is now Speaker of the House, third in line to the White House (though I’d rather it be someone not so liberal-minded as Pelosi, but whatever). I just can’t figure out how she got the gig.

Anyone…? Anyone…? Bueller…?

Winds of Change

Yesterday was a bit of a trip, will all the election results coming in. It was fun watching journalists/serious news types try to contain their glee at the opportunity to blanket us with wall-to-wall coverage of all the various races.

I have to admit, I kinda got caught up in all the excitement, even though I wasn’t emotionally invested in any of the results. As a conservative in liberal California, I got used to my vote getting canceled out by my own big sister and all my friends’ votes. So I vote, but I don’t expect much. It seems I moved into the most liberal county in Tennessee, so my votes still got canceled by someone (thanks for making me feel right at home, Davidson County).

The excitement I felt wasn’t about who or what "won" or "lost". It was about feeling the winds of change, even if its just a breeze, blowing through the nation. I think a change in congressional leadership will be good for the country, and I’m pretty confident the Dems won’t completely break America. Even if they do, we will be fine. We are a nation founded and expanded by adventurers and frontiersmen and women. The blood of Davey Crockett still flows through my veins, even if its quite diluted by generations. But that blood is joined by Native American blood, Revolutionary blood — and the blood of Jesus Christ. — Oh holy cow! Don’t get all "Da Vinci Code" on me. I’m speaking metaphorically now.

Look, we can do this. We can overcome whatever adversity comes our way. We’re just not so used to adversity these days, so we whine a lot. And we try to control everything, even when it’s obvious we cannot control anything. I am saddened by the passage of Amendment 1, but what can you do? Jesus’ Church is just a little too locked up in fear right now; so afraid of losing losing their own faith that cannot see they’ve already lost their way. Jesus would never had approved Amendment 1, but we His people are so much less then He. We are so imperfect. I am sad, but I am also excited. As Joseph told his brothers, "What you meant for evil, God meant for good." The enemy of our souls is laughing loud and hard over the passage of this amendment, for the pallor is casts over God’s people who are, sadly, so closely associated with its passage. But God will have the last laugh.

Not because He is legalistic and loves this amendment. I believe with my whole core that it grieves Him terribly. God will have the last laugh because He will use those who are truly following Him to overcome the damage of this law through grace and love. What an opportunity Jesus’ followers have now to throw open their door, throw open their lives, throw out their arms in wide loving embraces to those most hurt and feeling betrayed, those most angered, by this amendment.

The deed is done, but God is never finished working. He will continue working out His dreams and desires in and through those who love Him passionately, who beg Him to let them in on what He’s doing, let them be a part of it; a part of creating the future.

And that’s me. I beg Him daily to let me be a part of what He’s doing in the lives of every person around me. And I love Him passionately.

Like sweet rain on a summer day, I smell the winds of change, and it excites me. Can you smell it? Let’s create the future. Together with God.

A Voter’s Tale — From California Transplant to Tennessee… Queue-er?

I’d heard that there were often long lines at polling places in Nashville, but I’d also heard there had been record turn-out in early voting. I was sure the latter would cancel out the former and there would be no "long lines". I was so very, very wrong. This being my first time voting in Tennessee I was anxious to see the differences between my new state and my "home" state of California, sure that Tennessee would be just as good and rewarding an experience. Silly me.

I got up earlier than usual and headed out to the elementary school hoping that I would arrive in that magical time between all the early risers get-there-when-the-polls-open people and the I’m-late-to-work-hurry-this-up! crowd. No such luck. A parking lot filled-to-overflowing with cars disabused me of that fantasy immediately. But perhaps most of the cars belongs to faculty and staff, I thought as I pulled into the marked fire lane behind (and in front) of several other parked cars. One could hope, right?

I grabbed my little passport/money bag currently standing in for my wallet, which had my Voter Card (Tennessee actually has voter cards, how cute is that!! I’ve never seen one before!) and my sample ballet all marked up with my choices and jumped out of the car. It never occurred to me to bring along a book. After all, I wasn’t going in to read, I was going to vote. Besides, the line couldn’t be that long.

I stepped through the doors and saw a line filing out of the gym and down the hall. "Well this doesn’t look too bad," I thought. "they must have the gym full of voting booths, so this should go fast. Maybe I’ll even have time to get a chai from Starbucks on my way into work." Oh, how naive I was.

I cheerily looked at the bulletin boards and read all the posters on the walls, nostalgically remembering the good parts my elementary school days; dreamily thinking back to my favorite teachers, favorite lunch boxes and fun times with friends. I conveniently ignored the nagging memories of years of torture at the hands of school bullies, the relentless lampooning and ridiculing I received from many of my classmates nearly every year as the new kid in yet another school and the fact that I was so incredibly and obliviously weird that I deserved all the mockery I got. That’s the beauty of being an adult standing in a voting line at an elementary school you never attended. You can be nostalgic for a past that never actually existed.

Slowly our line moved forward, as one person after another disappeared through the jaws of the gym doors, swallowed in the bowels of the school. Every once in a while someone came out the opposite door, so I knew there was hope I would not be forever lost in there. Eventually, like Jonah, I’d be spit back out into the halls of Nashville’s little school and allowed to resume my real life.

I got to the door, fully expecting to be met by a long table full of smiling faces, ready to scratch my name off a list and give me my little punch card and send me off to a booth to vote. Instead, I was met by a sight that left me rather confused, and a little frightened.

Straight in front of me was a short table  behind which sat two stern-looking women dressed in tight beige suits. To my left was the long table I expected to first encounter, with large, hand-written signs bunching the alphabet into four distinct groups. Each had a line. The longest one, of course, was the one behind the grouping that included my last name. Beyond that was another line. — Is that all Tennesseans do when they vote?? Just stand in line till someone tells them they can go home? — That line started near the middle of the room, went all the way to the wall, made a u-turn, going behind the Table of the Stern Women in front of me, snaked down and behind the Alphabet Table and finally came to an end shortly before the door at the other end of the room from where I now stood; the door I’d seen a few people make their escape from moments earlier. All the way at the back, against the stage, was the goal, and the reason for all this line-forming madness: four voting "booths" — large tri-fold looking things with a person standing in front of the center section of each booth, facing the rest of the room.

I felt like a kid who’d just entered the inside line of the Indiana Jones Ride at Disneyland for the very first time, thinking she was already at the ride only to discover there’s another 45-minutes worth of waiting yet to go. Except I didn’t have all the fun stuff of the Indie-Jones ride to look at. So much for my Starbucks run. And why hadn’t I thought to bring my book? Oh, yeah, because I thought I was coming to this place to vote, not stand in line and read a book.

When the woman on the left side of the Table of Stern Women became free, I started to walk over to her, as the man in front of me was now signing some piece of paper for her partner in sternness. This first, left-side woman took in the whole sight of me in one of those up-and-down glances and firmly shook her head, saying, "you must stay in that line." She then smiled sweetly to the man behind me and said, "yes, you may come up."

What the…?? Was I not wearing the correct apparel for voting day in Tennessee? I wasn’t told there was a dress code. I instinctively looked down at myself. No, I was coordinated; even looked kind of pretty I thought. Okay, green and purple isn’t always the most conventional look, but they were muted colors and didn’t clash or anything. Was it because I’m fat? Or a woman? Is that line only for skinny men? The last person in that line was a heavy-set graying man, so perhaps it was my gender more than my weight. The skinny man from behind me finished his business with my rejecter and she happily waved a thin, pretty woman from behind me forward. Now I was getting irritated. Was this Tennessee’s version of voter screening? Was I wearing some sort of invisible sign that said, "skip me, I’m originally from California!"

Finally the man in front of me finished signing his name and I stepped up to Right-side Stern Woman. She asked me for my voting card, which I’d been holding in my hand. As I handed it to her she sighed a little, saying it was so good to have someone who actually had their card with them, not to mention had it out and ready. Finally! I thought. Finally I’ve done something right this morning. Right-side Stern Woman jerked her head to the left and said, "if you don’t bring your card, you gotta see her instead." Ah, so I was passed over because I had my Voter Registration Card. Note to self: next time don’t bring the dang voter card; you’ll get to the front of the line faster.

I was given a little white piece of paper to sign, which I did. I looked expectantly at Right-Side Stern Woman, who glanced down, and with exasperation creeping back into her voice, scolded, "you have to write your name and address on there too, ma’am." Oh. Okay. But why do you need that when its right here on my voter card, which I so faithfully brought, and so painfully paid for in more wait-time in the Long Line? "It has to be on that paper." I was no longer her favorite voter now, that much was clear. So I quickly wrote my name and address and handed it back to her. But she was too busy putting on lipstick and staring over at her partner’s book.

"Um, excuse me," I interrupted. "Here it is."

She looked up at me with a startled look on her face, as if she wasn’t expecting anyone to be there. "Oh no, dear. You keep that. You can go over there now and stand in that line." She vaguely pointed in the direction of the long Alphabet Table, her mind already back to that foggy, "happy" place it was when I interrupted her lipstick application.

I sighed heavily and walked over to the long table, getting behind four people who were behind me in the initial line, before the "no voter card" line had bumped them up nearer to the front. Every other alpha grouping had no line. Mine was the only one; and it was at least 8 people deep. I watched the other workers at the table as they mindlessly picked their teeth or stared into space, Ben Stein’s voice echoing through my mind, "Bueller… Bueller… "

As I stood there waiting, I quietly cursed my great-great-great-great-great grandparents for only changing the first letter of our last name from "A" to "E", rather than something more exotic, and rare, like "Q" or "Z". I remembered a woman back in California who’d betrayed me and who I still don’t like, and detested her all the more because her married name starts with "Z".

Finally, my turn arrived and I signed my name in the indicated box and moved on to the "final" line. By the time I got there, it really was to the back door. I looked at the clock and it had already taken nearly a half hour to get this far. How long would it take to get the rest of the way around the gym and back to the middle, where I’d finally be allowed to vote? The thought was too depressing to contemplate.

I thought back through the 20 years I voted in California, from my first experience at a polling place out of someone’s two-car garage (don’t laugh; they got 12 curtained voting booths in there. There were tons of people and I only waited about 5 minutes), to the last time — an early morning stop at a bowling alley lobby.

In California the process is so simple, so easy. I’d walk up to my polling place, maybe wait in my particular alphabetical line 5-10 minutes at the very most, show my driver’s license to a person who’d check me off the list and hand me my little punch card. I’d walk into the little booth, punch card and sample ballot in hand, close the curtain, stick my little card in the the proper slot and start poking out chads. Once I was done I’d double check my work, pull my card out, check for "hanging chads" and step out of the booth. I’d hand my little punch card to another pollster person, who would pull off the perforated stub at the end, so I had physical tangible proof of my ballot and its number, and, as I watched, they would drop it in the ballot box, all safe and sound from any tampering. Then they’d hand me my "I voted" sticker and send me on my way with a smile and a wave. It was all so painless, even fun. And they were all so friendly and happy.

Not like here, in this cold gym in a Nashville elementary school, with cranky, stern, disapproving workers and long, long lines. I was trapped, and I knew it. They had my name and my signature. I was crossed off the list of invitees. If my hatred-bordering-on-phobia of long lines got the best of me and I bolted out the door, any door I could find, I would not be allowed back into the line-party once I collected myself. This was it. I either stick it out to the end, or forfeit my right to vote. I finally looked down at the paper Right-side Stern Woman had handed me to write my name and address on and sign, hoping perhaps it was a hall-pass, which held my place in line should I need to escape it for any reason. It wasn’t. The paper’s heading read, "Application to Vote".

Oh, man. Now I knew I was screwed. I thought that’s what I had done when I registered to vote, but it seems in Tennessee, you must not only register, but apply. What if they turned me down, denied my application, said I wasn’t "voter material"? All this waiting would be for nothing! The room began to spin. I started to feel weak and everything dimmed for a moment. I don’t know if it was the application to vote idea, my phobia of long lines finally kicking in or the fact that I hadn’t yet had breakfast, but I suddenly didn’t feel so good.

Slowly, ever so sloooowly, the line moved forward as one by one people got up to the funky-looking, tri-fold voter "booths". All the booths opened away from the line, so that as each voter stood in their booth, their faces, heads and shoulders were clearly visible. As I watched, I got more and more worried that this "new fangled" computerized voting was going to be the death of me; or at least of my voting record. Every person that stepped up to one of those things frowned and squinted their way through their selections. Some faces registered nothing more than a frown, while others seemed awash in confusion; still others went through a symphony of expressions, none of them good. But the ones that worried me the most were those that looked like they were seeing ghosts. Oh, my! The longer I stood there, the more I longed for the comfort of my old punch card. Hanging chad or no, at least I could physically see and touch the voting marks I was making.

After forty-five minutes, yes 45 minutes, of standing in the Snaking Line, I was finally at the front. An austere-looking older gentleman handed me a large, laminated card with colorful instructions on how to operate the new fangled voting machine. It did little to calm my nerves, despite its big pictures and cheerful colors. As I stared at the big letters, I felt like I was reading a foreign language. Suddenly nothing I read made any sense and I was more convinced than ever that my vote would be lost in some cyber black hole especially created to swallow the votes of California-transplants. I continued to stare at the card, transfixed by both its colorfulness and my own fear.

Mr. Austere sudden yelled out, "ONE!" It startled me so badly my feet literally left the floor and I dropped the card. It clattered to the floor, much to the disapproval of Mr. Austere and making much more noise than a laminated card ought, which drew the attention of the rest of the gym. Thankfully I was rescued from the clutches of all the censorious stares by a kindly older gentleman — finally a compassionate face! — who led me over to Booth One and briefly showed me what to do, commending me as we went for bringing my marked up sample ballot with me. "That’ll make it easier and faster," he nodded in encouragement.

Mr. Compassionate stepped away and left me alone with the large California-transplant vote-eating machine. I stared it down for a moment, giving it my best "you won’t beat me" look and hoping as I did that it was convincing enough to keep the machine in line. I was surrounded by plastic. At least I think it was plastic. It looked like plastic. In front of me a large computer touch-screen invited me to begin my voting experience. To my left and right were the "wings" which I suppose were created to give the screens some stability and privacy. They looked as if they could also serve as stands for me to put my sample ballot on. However, the whole ensemble appeared so precarious I was afraid to touch anything other than the screen, for fear of knocking the whole thing to the ground. I quietly got to work pressing the proper boxes for my candidates and amendment votes, squinting and scowling with the rest of my fellow voters.

My fellow voters! Perhaps I’d manage to make the transition from California voter to Tennessee voter after all. I’d survived the Stern Sisters, the Alphabet Line and the longest snakiest line to vote I’d ever encountered. All I had left to do was press confirm and I would be done. I paged through all my votes twice to be sure I hadn’t hit the screen in the wrong place somewhere. Finally, still unconvinced but feeling pressed for time, I pressed confirm and a red light flashed. And everything went away.

Mr. Compassionate came up and said, "you did it! You done?" His voice wasn’t as compassionate as before; more like anticipatory. Yeah, I think I did. I think I am. "Well, good job." There was a pause. Then he added, "You can go now." I was still staring at the blank screen, thinking, it all just… went away…. where did it go? I really wanted something tangible in that moment, something in my hands that confirmed I really had voted, it wasn’t just a dream, and my votes really were going to be counted, could be counted. Somewhere. But Mr. Not-So-Compassionate-Anymore was not-so-gently pushing me toward the door so the next Tennessee Voter could touch the screens of politics.

I wandered in a daze toward the door. No one smiled or cheered or waved as I left. I had to "give" myself an "I Voted" sticker, picking one off the sticker page left carelessly sitting on a chair by the door. I walked out into the drizzling rain, an hour and a half after arriving at that little elementary school, feeling not so much like a fellow voter as I did a cow who’d been chided and poked and pushed through a maze and now stood in a rainy, empty field of hay.

I treated myself to Starbucks after all. When I pulled into the drive-way at the West End Starbucks drive-through I was met with… another line. Like the dutiful, trained cow I now am, I queued up and waited.

Long Voting Lines Already

I went to the Green Hills Library tonight with every intention to vote, since it was the last night to vote early. The next opportunity will be Tuesday at my polling place. I walked in, saw the line, followed the line back, back, back… good grief! Back to the back of the library and then around again.

I turned around and walked back out. So much for eliminating the long lines to vote by voting early. I guess I wasn’t early enough.

Tuesday polling place here I come.

Women of Faith Weekend

Womenoffaithends
I just got home from a long "weekend" — Thursday evening through today. I was in South Carolina attending the Women of Faith conference in Charlotte, NC.

Wow. I mean, Wow! It was a powerful time of amazing speakers, beautiful worship and fun. Sandi Patty, Patsy Clairmont, Lucie Swindoll, Chonda Pierce, Marilyn Meberg,Thelma Wells and Sheila Walsh. Every one of them had something significant to teach me. There was so much to soak in that I’m still processing all that I learned over the weekend. I will post about some the most consequential things God spoke to me about in the next few days. But I’m just way too exhausted right now. I need to get some sleep before work tomorrow!

Boring Wins in Tennessee

This is hilarious. I was watching Nightline just now and they were talking about all the new political ads out, including the Republican ad against Ford.

Bay Buchanan, political pundit, pointed out that Tennessee produced both Al Gore and Bill Frist — Boring. Boring-boring-boring.

"Tennessee likes boring," she said. "Boring wins in Tennessee. And here you have this flamboyant, smooth-talkin’ ladies man. That’s not the image. That’s what that ad does. It made Ford reinforce this image of a dapper man that’s maybe not in touch with the people of Tennessee."

She goes on to say, "Corker is boring. Boring wins."

1_baaa_3 That’s hilarious! Corker wins because he’s boring!!

Hey wait… we also "produced" Fred Thompson. He’s not boring.

Guess that’s why he’s no longer here…..

Mozart and Schermerhorn

If you haven’t been the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, you need to go. Really. YouPiano_stage_lg
need to go. And those of you considering visiting Nashville, this is one place that needs to be on your Must See list (along with the Ryman and Fido; okay, yeah, my taste runs a little toward the eclectic).

The building itself is amazingly beautiful, with its airy, open feel, clean lines and mix of stone and wood. But I think its the acoustics that enchanted me most. Granted, I was sitting in the orchestra section in the middle. Pretty much the best seats to have to begin with — and I have no idea how I managed to score such great seats, seeing as how I got my ticket tonight at the box-office, with the help of my friends who have season tickets (tip to the interested: find someone who has season tickets and have them purchase your ticket for you. They get a big discount on any extra tickets they get. It is sooooo worth it, considering tickets can cost upwards of $80).

Perfect seats aside, the sound was amazing — which is a very important thing to this little Soundchick. I had read in several different reviews that there is no accoustically
bad seat in the hall, and after tonight, I’m inclined to believe it. I could hear everything, even the smallest whispers of sound from any instrument on stage, and none of the dynamic range between pianismo and fortismo got lost in the engineer’s attempt to balance our listening experience. In fact, a few times I wondered if they really had need for someone to man a sound board at all, even though I could see a battery of microphones strung from the ceiling. Was I hearing the symphony through a sound system, or was I actually hearing them "unplugged"? I have no idea.

And the symphony, wow! They are incredible. I’m not a symphony sophistocit, so I cannot rate how our symphony compares with those in other cities. All I can say is that I thought it was beautiful, and I would have been happy to stay there all night listening to them play.

Skim_lgTonight it was Mozart, and Sibelius. I love Mozart; have since I first remember connecting his name to his music. Sibelius I’d never heard of, but for the most part, I liked what I heard. Our conductor for the evening was Anu Tali, whom I found to be a delight to watch. And who shocked me with her youth (she graduated high school in 1991;jeez, I feel old).

The best part of the evening was, in my mind, the Mozart Concerto No. 5 in A major. Soovin Kim was the guest violinist. He was such a joy to watch! You could see his love for the music in every note he played. His face just shone with excitement. He made me smile and enjoy the music all the more just watching him beam as he played his 1709 Stradivarius. If you ever have a chance to see him play, take it; by any means possible, take it.

We ended our evening with sushi at Ru San’s. Oooooo, yum. You have got to try this place! I’m so not a sushi eater — raw fish give me the heebies — but I had veggie rolls with shrimp tempura inside that were absolutely To.Die.For. And the chefs and waiter all have way too much fun! I want me one of those cool t-shirts they all wear, "Got Sushi?" Yes. I am a happy, happy little camper tonight. It was the perfect way to end a perfect evening.

Photos from The Nashville Symphony website.

Why I’m Voting No on 1

Just about the time I get all calmed down and peaceful like, I pick up another paper, or watch yet another news story on how James Dobson, Dick Land or Jerry Sutton want me to be sure to "keep my Christian values in mind" when I go to the polls this November (or this week…). It happened again today.

I sat down at Crest Honda to wait on my baby’s first oil change (that’s "ohl" to you Tennesseans) and as I’m flipping through the latest version of The Scene, I come across an article about Monday night’s dueling rallies for Amendment One. The language quoted from the Two Rivers rally both angered and saddened me.

I realize I am an anomaly in Tennessee. Even more so considering I am, what most statisticians and pollsters would classify an "evangelical/born again/fundamentalist Christian." (why do they lump us all together like that????) –Truthfully, I’m evangelical and born again, but I doubt I’m really a true fundamentalist. But I still end up lumped in with them. Anyway –Current polls show this amendment will pass with between 60% to 70% of the vote. So why am I swimming upstream against my "fellow" born-againer fundies? Well, let me tell you.

First, for those of you outside Tennessee — and those inside who have been living in a cave lo this past year — "1" (or "One"… whatever…) is an amendment to Tennessee’s constitution. Officially called "Tennessee Marriage Amendment", it would limit any recognized marriages in Tennessee to those between a man and a woman. Even if a gay couple has been legally married in another state, Tennessee will not, cannot, recognize it.

I can already hear my some of my friends gasping, exclaiming, "why on earth would you vote no on such a thing, Lu? Don’t you believe in the sanctity of marriage? Don’t you know that God sees same-sex marriage as sin?"

Yes, I do. And, No, I don’t — at least not any more so than same-sex sex/relationship outside of marriage.

Look, I could write a whole post just on my deep conviction that homosexuality is sin, with all the Scriptural references to back it up. It would include my own understanding of how sin, from Adam on, has impacted every aspect and element of creation; including genetics, which can strongly influence a person’s proclivity for same-sex attraction.

But that’s not the point here. And its not the reason why I’m voting NO on this amendment.

There are a couple of facts that need to be stated. First, this amendment is wholly unnecessary. In 1996, a proposition was put on the Tennessee ballot and passed, which effectively banned same-sex marriage in this state. The amendment was proposed after the Massachusetts Supreme Court, in 2003, struck down a similar proposition passed in that state. It is a way of ensuring that ’96 proposition will not be set aside as "unconstitutional".

Second, and obviously connected to the first, the failure of Amendment One would not open wide Tennessee’s doors to the possibility of gay marriage becoming legal in the state. For reasons clearly stated above (1996).

Those are the facts. This amendment is unnecessary. This amendment is redundant.

Here’s the Truth.  Passing this amendment will not "save", "protect" or in any way salvage the "sanctity" or "purity" of marriage. It cannot. It is powerless to effect the heart changes necessary to do such a thing. It is not the homosexual community who has ravaged the purity and sanctity, the set-apartness, of marriage. It is the heterosexual community, and dare I say, the "Christian" community, who has done the most damage to the institution of marriage and could ultimately destroy the ideal of it in our culture. It is those who choose mediocrity in their relationship with their spouse over sacrifice and passion, who change marriage partners as often as they change their wardrobe, who value their own comfort and their own needs above those of their spouses and children who destroy its sanctity. And it is those who wield marriage and family as weapons in a "values war" who destroy the purity of the marriage commitment and the sanctity of the marriage vow.

Jerry Sutton, pastor of Two Rivers Baptist Church, claimed at Monday night’s rally that we Christians are at "war against homosexual militants" and "debauchery". How can a pastor of such a large church be so incredibly clueless? No wonder we’re vilified in television shows and ridiculed in comedy clubs. No wonder we’re disliked by so many. We have idiots preaching from our "pulpits".

Even a cursory glance at the Bible brings abundant clarity that Jerry Sutton is flat-out wrong. Perhaps he is waging a personal war against "homosexual militants", but God certainly is not. He never has and He never will.

Paul makes it very clear that our battle is not against flesh and blood, but against the spiritual forces of evil in this world and against every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God. (Eph 6:12, 2 Cor 10:4-5). The Message puts it this way:

The tools of our trade aren’t for marketing or manipulation, but they are for demolishing that entire massively corrupt culture. We use our powerful God-tools for smashing warped philosophies, tearing down barriers erected against the truth of God, fitting every loose thought and emotion and impulse into the structure of life shaped by Christ.

Jerry Sutton, rather than demolishing corruption, instead erected a barrier against the truth of God with his statements Monday night. Many others have done the same, all in the name of "preserving," and "protecting" marriage. Jerry Sutton has a warped philosophy and its time we as his sisters and brothers stood up and said, "no more."

Jesus did not rage against homosexuals or "sinners" when He walked this earth. To the contrary, He openly embraced and loved them, fellowshipped with them, and made it clear it was for them that He came, for them He died and for them He conquered death and lives today. So that they may have Life.

Nor did Jesus ever demand that the sinners He fellowshipped with ever live up to laws of Moses given to God’s people. Rather, He loved them just as they were, accepted them just as they were and invited them to follow Him and learn a new, more abundant way to live. He never forced His will or His rules upon them.  He is the same today. He does not force His will or His law upon anyone.

The religious zealots, on the other hand, like those of Jerry Sutton, Dick Land and James Dobson, those are the people that Jesus raged against. Them He declared "war" against — overturning tables, calling them hypocrites and snakes. For they were the ones that kept writing more and more rules for everyone to follow, more and more laws for everyone to obey, more and more hoops for a person to jump through in order to be found acceptable to God.

Amendment One will not protect marriage. All it will do is create yet another barrier between those Jesus loves and those of us who claim to follow Him. The gay community is already denied legal rights regarding the care of their own children, their own partners and their own loved ones that even an unmarried heterosexual couple enjoy under the law. Why kick them in the stomach when they’re already down?

I have said it before, the United States is not a "Christian" nation, nor was it ever meant to be. It was created as a safe haven for people of all religions. However, it is a Christianized nation, with a brand of Christianity that is more cultural than Biblical. If we are going to perpetrate Christianity on our country, let it at least be Biblical, with all the love and grace and respect God reveals in His Word.

Forcing nonbelievers to live like they are believers may seem "morally righteous" but, in truth, it’s cruel. They have neither the understanding nor the power of the Holy Spirit with which to overcome the enemy and live in freedom under the standards God sets for us, His followers. God never forces nonbelievers to live by the same standards as His people. Rather, He calls His people to live by standards that would cause the world around us to stand up and take notice, in order that HE might have the glory and honor when His people are able to point to Him as the source of the ability to live by such freedom, grace, hope and love.

That is why I’m voting NO on One.