Does Glenn Youngkin use religion to essentially launder money? The Sweet Deal That VA GOP Governor Candidate Glenn Youngkin’s Foundation Gives To A Church And... via @Forbesforbes.com/sites/giacomot…
This is a troubling story - didn't see it until this evening (been following some threads about Youngkin and religion....)
Worth noting that nobody in the media paid attention to the religious dimensions of last GOP governor, Bob McDonnell, whose ties to far right wing Christian views and groups came into play around policies - and the eventual scandal - of his tenure.
I'm hearing many reports of parents terrified of sending their under-12 children back to school in places where mask mandates are forbidden by new states laws.
Wondering if this is yet another way to destroy trust in public schools? Force people into homeschooling & privates?
Not only do anti-masking laws undermine the public schools (long-standing priority of religious conservatives), but they get bonus points (in their worldview) for incentivizing women to leave the workforce in order to stay home with children.
This is a huge two-fer in the most radical of Christian circles - exploiting a crisis to manipulate public policy to create fear and limit women and children to smaller and smaller domestic spheres where husbands are in control of economics and education.
Didn't really expect to spend part of my day being berated by high school classmates in Arizona for quoting Leviticus 19:34 and saying that I chose love over fear.
On FB, of course.
Another classmate chimed in with kindness & grace about welcoming strangers (she's a great human - I'm glad we've been friends for all these years) and a couple guys started saying "you liberals" (huge AZ insult). I wrote back, "It isn't liberal, it is biblical."
Watching some clergy attacking Pelagianism reminded me how Sen Josh Hawley blamed "our present crisis" on Pelagius (CT magazine, 6/4/19).
It is unnerving seeing people in my own denomination (Episcopal Church) echoing Josh Hawley.
And I'm not convinced either the critics or Hawley understand Pelagius.
It unnerves me because I recognize the theological road where a certain kind of radical Augustinian position and exclusionary politics become intertwined.
I once traveled that road. It nearly undid me - took me to the most self-abusive and hurtful places of my entire life.