Here is one Christian's response to the mess in France.
It isn't that the comments are wrong, quite the opposite,
but this really is rather lame  -or lukewarm, or timid.
 
We can do better than that, can't we?
 
But the following article is a place to start. It offers some
basic considerations to work with,
 
 
Billy
 
-------------------
 
 
Decency, Pluralism, and the Christian Response  to Charlie Hebdo

 
 
By _Andrew T.  Walker_ (http:/
/www.christianpost.com/author/andrew-t-walker/)  , Christian Post Op-Ed 
Contributor
January 8, 2015

 
Last night, The Weekly Standard _tweeted_ 
(https://twitter.com/weeklystandard/status/552929153612533762)  "Print Free or 
Die" with a picture of  the 
prophet Muhammed, whose physical iconography is the purported reason that  the 
terrorist attacks were carried out in the first place. 
Always willing to play the part of social media provocateur, I  readied 
myself to re-tweet that image myself, ready to join in the chorus of  those 
wishing to thumb their nose in an act of First Amendment defiance toward  the 
offended party. As a liberty-loving conservative, I believe one hundred  
percent in the free exchange of offense. The condition of freedom enlists the  
possibility, and perhaps requires, that all shall be ready to be offended. 
The  promise of freedom is that we can return such offense in kind. We live in 
a  society where we are penalty-free from stating our convictions without 
recourse  from the government (at least in theory; see _Barronelle Stutzman_ 
(http://blog.alliancedefendingfreedom.org/2014/05/23/4-things-you-need-to-kno
w-about-barronelle-stutzmans-story/) ). It does not mean, though, that  our 
actions are entirely consequence free, as the tragedy of France proves. The 
 promise of free speech means that the free exchange of ideas, and the 
attendant  competition of ideas, allows the best ideas to surface to the top. 
That's why  Christians defend religious liberty. Yes, we want the freedom to 
preach and  evangelize. But we also believe that which is true shouldn't be 
stifled, and  that the Christian gospel should be matched up against the 
prevailing  philosophical and ideological champions of the day. 
I decided against retweeting the image of Muhammed. Luke 6:31 came  to 
mind: "And as you wish that others would do to you, do so to them." As a  
Christian, I'm not so much offended as I am tired and exasperated at the  
disrespect and contempt for religion Writ Large when the representative  
iconoclasm 
of such things as the "_Piss  Christ_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piss_Christ) " rear their ugly head. I'm not a 
Mormon, but I don't like seeing  
Mormonism mocked. Neither am I Catholic, but I don't like anti-Catholic 
bigotry. 
 I'm not Jewish, but I don't like seeing Jews caricatured. I'm a Christian, 
but I  believe in the valuable contribution that all religions bring to a 
free civil  society. As I would not want Christ mocked, so I decided to not 
mock Islam's  prophet. This is not a moment of Holier-Than-Thou Christian 
Do-Goodism. It's to  suggest that the commodity of all religions is undervalued 
in Western society;  and that refraining from offending religious sects 
isn't to bow the knee to  political correctness or to become Sharia-compliant. 
As Christians continue to advocate for a genuine pluralism, one  that 
accepts and respects differences, understanding religion's sacred totems  means 
that we demonstrate a modicum of respect. None of this is to suggest that  
respect for religion entails the negation of the freedom to offend it. By no  
means. Offend away. The question is one of prudence; and whether exercising  
one's freedom is the clearest, quickest route to solving the complex 
dilemma of  getting different people of different cultures to live together 
with 
one  another—peacefully. 
Christian decency is the option before us. Yes, we should defend  the right 
of free speech as a necessary condition for religious liberty. Let me  be 
very clear: Charlie Hebdo has every right to reprint an image of Muhammed.  
Democracy, self-rule, and liberty come loaded with risk. And Westerners and  
Christians should defend that right and embrace such risk. But the liberty 
to do  so doesn't speak to the wisdom of doing so. 
So, defend Charlie Hebdo. Defend free speech. Condemn the murderous  idiocy 
of those whose illiberalism can't stand ridicule. But maybe encourage  
those given to sacrilege to consider the wisdom of their  actions?

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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