this post was submitted on 23 Apr 2024
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The Satanic Temple

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I noticed there wasn't a TST Lemmy community. The Satanic Temple is a modern satanic religion that aims to promote human rights and compassion. Check out their about page on their official website at https://thesatanictemple.com/pages/about-us. Note that this community is not an official affiliation. TST is also separate and not affiliated with the Church of Satan, who have a slightly different viewpoint of what satanism truly is. Dunno what to post in here, but maybe some will search for this and take part. Hello!

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"We are going to put Satanic chaplains in Florida schools, nothing in the bill places limits on who can become a chaplain, and Ron DeSantis can not simply amend the Constitution limiting the religious liberty of some by proclamation from the podium. "

excellent, yes. exactly. @thesatanictemple

https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/desantis-says-satanism-is-not-real-and-not-qualifying-for-new-florida-school-chaplain-program/

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[–] [email protected] 62 points 6 months ago (23 children)

Please donate to the Satanic Temple if you are able. They fight these important cases on our behalf. Christofascists need to be reminded that this isn't a christian nation and that all religions are equal(y bad).

[–] chiliedogg 13 points 6 months ago (2 children)

I'm Christian and have donated to the Satanic Temple. Separation of Church and State is good for both institutions. I want the church out of politics and I want politics out of the church.

[–] Blankmann 6 points 6 months ago (1 children)

If there are politics in your church, it's not really a church... and the IRS would very much like to know

[–] chiliedogg 3 points 6 months ago

Churches can have stances on political issues. They can't have a stance on how to vote.

A example would be gay marriage (to be clear, I'm 100% supportive of LGBT+). Many churches have been opposed to homosexuality for millenia. However, in the second half of of the 20th century it became a relevant political issue. That didn't mean the churches had to stop talking about it. I fact, that would be an example of the state inserting itself into religious teaching.

It's a fine line to walk. Churches don't pay some taxes, but they do pay others (my old church had a building it rented to a for-profit business, and that rent was taxable), and the employees all pay income tax. They also have some very-specific equal-employment exceptions. They can require that employees who serve a religious function be a practicing member of the faith and follow the rules of the church.

That is: the pastor and other religious-leadership employees of a Southern Baptist church can be fired if they're not Christian, are gay, or have an extra-martial affair. But the sound guy, finance director, and janitor cannot, because their job duties don't include religious leadership.

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