Just a thought, about how some people have said the majority are not really Christian. So I would like to ask, who are YOU to decide whether they are Christian or not? You don't know what is in their hearts.
There's the rub. This country's original white population consisted of an awful lot of people who called themselves "Christian" who were, in fact, documentably, being oppressed -
by other people calling themselves "Christian".
We are
not one big, happy family.
Take Iraq, for instance. With under 3% of the population even claiming to be Christian, and dwindling daily, it still has the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Syriac Orthodox Church, the Chaldean Catholic Church, and the Assyrian Church of the East within its borders.
If any of them were like the others, then they would have banded together long ago. I think it's safe to say that I know more about different denominations of Christians than a majority of nominal Christians do, yet I know only enough to make sense out of the wikipedia pages' writeups on these examples.
Expecting a Bible-belt evangelical living in a town that
might also have a straight Roman Catholic church in it to be able to draw distinctions is expecting a lot, IMO.
Christ is on record as saying "I am the Truth". The man who sentenced him to die is on record as responding, "What is truth?"
I don't think it gets clearer than this. The story is that God became man and declared Truth, and that a worldly man with no understanding responded by mocking the whole concept of Truth.
But if you're going to take a stand on something, to the point of literally getting eaten by lions, I think it makes sense to find out whether or not it's the absolute Truth. Thus we have fracturing in Christianity. Thus we have historical examples of nominal Christians not just willing to die for their truth... but also willing to kill.
The people that came here were trying to escape that. They helped usher in a new way - one which called a ceasefire between Christian groups.
Then, almost immediately, came the empire. Steadily, over time, it has been convincing Christians to start worshiping
it. And Christians have turned from their Truth and embraced the truth of the state. The state's truth doesn't care what the truth is - unless the truth being spoken offends the state. Then, it doesn't appeal to truth at all... only power.
Are Christians oppressed here, in the US? No. They're cajoled, threatened, indoctrinated, brainwashed, and, if they still refuse to worship at the feet of the eagle... well, if you've attracted that much attention, we'll find some other reason to do away with you. Like I said, truth isn't important to the empire. It doesn't matter why, only that it happens. It's been 20 years since they proved, live on national TV, that they can do anything they want to whomever they want, as long as they spin it properly.
They know we don't get along, and they know how to exploit that. Make a generic cross, and park an eagle next to it. Erect new temples to our fascist overlords, control the funerals of those who die in the service of the eagle... but always refer back to that generic cross. That bland, nondescript, unspecified, vague, meaningless cross.
See? Now we get along. Under the eagle, we have POWER! We destroy nations and build them up again!
Only that's not truth. If you remove the eagle, we don't get along. In fact, we've oppressed each other, and not that long ago.
I don't doubt that Christians are being oppressed by non-Christians elsewhere.
Here, I think the problem is different. The problem here is that Christians take offense to things that ultimately should offend anyone of any religious background (if they would bother to look at the REAL issue, that is), and the only reason they do so is because the eagle is telling them to do it. And the ultimate reason for that is that it turns them against Christ and toward the eagle.