http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/trib/newssummary/s_442132.html

What's legal for Evangelists should be legal for
Satanists

By Mike Seate
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Monday, April 10, 2006 


Last weekend, I visited a Bloomfield coffee house.
Nothing unusual about that, only this time I was
recognized by a regular reader of this column. 
The man seemed friendly enough and actually
complimented me on my work, but then he had to go and
get all goofy on me. The guy asked if he could pray
with me for my continued success. 

"No thanks, bud, I'm an atheist," I told him, hoping
the conversation would end there. 

Ah, but who is more determined than a religious zealot
faced with what they believe is a lost soul?
Naturally, my lack of faith struck my new friend as a
challenge so he placed one hand on my shoulder and
started praying out loud. 

Politely brushing him aside, I wondered to myself why
it is that so many religious people feel compelled to
proselytize total strangers. If I had a bible for
every time I've been ambushed by streetcorner
preachers on Downtown streets, I could open my own
church. 

And who hasn't had religious leaflets shoved in their
hands by folks clocking lost souls? 

In all but the most fanatical encounters, these
guerilla evangelists can be deterred with a few
philosophical counterpoints, but some will keep at it
until even an atheist prays to be left alone. The
reason they persist, I believe, is because religious
fanatics -- particularly the Christian ones -- know
they have the law on their side. 

How else could anyone account for the charges facing a
trio of Somerset County teens who are facing
misdemeanor charges for trying to convert Christians
into Satanists? 

According to the state police, the youths entered the
St. Andrews Lutheran church April 2 and began shouting
at the flock and displaying Satanic symbols. The trio
must have felt they were on to something, so they
headed over to the nearby All Saints Church where they
questioned the faith of a bunch of 7 to 12-year-olds
waiting in line for confession. 

An off-duty state trooper who attends services at All
Saints followed the juveniles out to their car, took
information from them and later filed a complaint
against the youths. The teens face counts of
disorderly conduct, harassment and stalking. 

These kids need a good, swift kick in their pentagrams
for ruining somebody's worship service, but these are
some fairly serious charges for interrupting a church
service. What they did was rude and ill-conceived, but
I'm not so convinced it was illegal. 

And anyway, if being obnoxious about faith is against
the law, there's not enough jail cells in the state
for all the pushy believers out there.

Gargoyle's Occult Services - http://www.angelfire.com/goth/drgargoyle

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