I’ve been featuring a lot of conservative women lately, and not just Marsha Blackburn and Michele Bachmann. Earlier this week I featured Dawn Eden, who is a champion of chastity, and Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse who champions parenting, men and the family. (I found a very frank, funny podcast by Dr. J where she is speaking to a Catholic church about chastity, marriage and parenting – her podcast feed is here)
How are women different than men?
Here are some ways that women are different than men:
- women tend to favor gun control, because guns are loud and scary
- women tend to emphasize having their needs met by Christianity over theology and apologetics
- women tend to favor compassion and forgiveness over responsibility and moral obligations
Well, let’s just see what Laura over the Pursuing Holiness blog thinks about all of that!
1. Laura likes guns
She writes:
Consider, for example, the New Bethel Church in Louisville, KY. Pastor Ken Pagano has decided to have a Gun Day at church. The Gun Day will include patriotic music and gun safety information. After all, recent shootings at churches have illustrated the need for responsible, defensive gun ownership.
I thought to myself, Sweet, maybe I should convert to the Assemblies of God and be a part of this.
2. Laura likes God
She writes:
What if church was about worshiping and learning about a holy and sovereign God? A radical idea, I know.
…What’s the point of filling a church with benchwarmers, or in turning a church into a community organization where people perform service in order to fulfill their own moral code instead of for the glory of God? We have a country full of people and groups intent on self-gratification. If the church is no different, people may as well sleep in on Sundays.
3. Laura likes moral obligations
She writes:
Is there something morally wrong about being required to pay for [medical] services we willingly received? It’s far more morally wrong to have people throw in the towel and just refuse to pay, but even that is an option that society chooses to accept via bankruptcy laws.
I really don’t understand why people are buying into the idea that it’s some massive, morally unsound, unfair burden to pay for the medical services that they willingly received. It’s entirely fair. You asked for those services, you accepted them, and now you need to quit whingeing and pay up.
Laura’s blog is called Pursuing Holiness.