My Take: The five biggest misconceptions about secularism [View all]
Editors note: Jacques Berlinerblau is associate professor of Jewish Civilization at Georgetown University. His book, How to Be Secular: A Call to Arms for Religious Freedom has just been released.
October 6th, 2012
10:00 PM ET
By Jacques Berlinerblau, Special to CNN
As far as the Republicans are concerned, President Barack Obama is secularisms go-to guy in Washington. Newt Gingrich refers to him as a secular-socialist. Mitt Romney charges that his opponent advocates a secular agenda. And Rick Santorum frets that Obama is imposing secular values on people of faith.
The president, however, seems not to have received the whole him-being-a-secularist memo. American secularists have thrown up their hands in frustration over his supersizing of George W. Bushs Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives. They roll their eyes at his God talk. As for his recent call for days of prayer and remembrance to commemorate 9/11, well, would the late Rev. Jerry Falwell have done it any differently?
After spending years trying to sequence the genome of American secularism, I have arrived at a sobering conclusion: no -ism is as misunderstood as this one. All of which is bad for secularists, secularism and America. Lets look at some of the biggest misconceptions out there:
1. Secularist: Just another word for atheist: Not true! But that doesnt mean there is any thing wrong with nonbelievers. Nor does it mean that secularists and atheists dont share scads of objectives in common (e.g., opposing religious establishment, securing freedom from religion, defending free expression).
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/10/06/my-take-the-five-biggest-misconceptions-about-secularism/