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Criminalizing Christianity:
Sweden's Hate Speech Law
R. Albert Mohler, Jr. | August 6 2004
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/august2004/060804criminalizingchristianity.htm
"In Europe people are starting to be jailed
for saying what they think." Those words were spoken by Vladimir
Palko, the Slovak Interior Minister, in a strongly worded
protest to the Swedish ambassador to Slovakia. The minister's
comments represented outrage over the jailing of a Christian
pastor for preaching against homosexuality. The arrest of this
pastor in Sweden is only a foretaste of what is to come, if
homosexual advocates and their ideology gain traction in the
United States and other nations.
Ake Green, pastor of a Pentecostal
congregation in Kalmar, Sweden, was sentenced to one month in
prison on a charge of inciting hatred against homosexuals.
Pastor Green was prosecuted for his sermon in a January hearing,
where he was found guilty of "hate speech against homosexuals"
for a sermon preached in 2003.
According to press reports, Pastor Green
condemned homosexuality as "abnormal, a horrible cancerous tumor
in the body of society." His comments were delivered as part of
a sermon, drawn from biblical texts, dealing with the sin of
homosexuality. In Sweden, biblical preaching is now a crime.
The prosecution of a Christian pastor for
the crime of preaching a biblical sermon sets a new low for the
culture of political correctness. Evangelical Christians--and
all those who cherish civil liberties--should observe this case
with great interest and concern. Those who reject biblical truth
are now set on silencing Christian pulpits--all in the name of
tolerance, acceptance, and diversity.
The logic of this prosecution is driven by
the ardent determination of homosexual activists to make all
criticism of homosexuality illegal. The logic of many hate
crimes statutes plays right into this ideological strategy. By
silencing all opposition, advocates for the normalization of
homosexuality have the public square entirely to themselves,
with defenders of biblical sexuality and the traditional family
left without a voice and risking prosecution for any language or
argument deemed offensive by the guardians of political
correctness.
In response to the protest by the Slovakian
Interior Minister, Cecilia Julin, the Swedish ambassador to
Slovakia, explained: "Swedish law states that public addresses
cannot be used to instigate hatred towards a certain group." So
much for free speech and religious liberty.
Sweden passed its hate speech statute in
2002, explicitly including "church sermons" as subject to the
law's restrictions. As the Riksdag, Sweden's parliament, debated
the legislation, the nation's chancellor of justice released a
public note stating that a church sermon characterizing
homosexual behaviors as sinful "might" be considered a criminal
offense. That "might" must now be replaced with "will," proved
by Pastor Green's conviction and jail term.
Swedish homosexual activists pledged to
monitor church sermons for content in order to report any
offensive preaching to the authorities. Soren Andersson,
president of the Swedish Federation for Gay, Lesbian, and
Transgender Rights told Christianity Today that his group would
"report hate speech regardless of where it occurs." He now
argues that religious liberty must not be used as a rationale
for offending homosexuals.
The Swedish church newspaper Kyrkans Tidning
reported that the prosecutor in this case, Kjell Yngvesson,
justified the arrest and prosecution of Pastor Green on these
grounds: "One may have whatever religion one wishes, but this is
an attack on all fronts against homosexuals. Collecting Bible
citations on this topic as he does makes this hate speech."
This is one of the most shocking and
revealing statements uttered by any legal official in recent
times. This prosecutor has the audacity to argue that one may
hold to "whatever religion one wishes," so long as one does not
preach from the Bible and address the issue of homosexuality
from a biblical perspective. The simple practice of reading
biblical texts teaching the sinfulness of homosexuality is now
against the law in Sweden.
What can explain this arrogance? Northern
Europe has become one of the most secularized regions of the
globe, with the Scandinavian nations leading the trend towards
the utter abandonment and eradication of the Christian faith
from modern society. Surveys and polls consistently report an
alarmingly low percentage of Scandinavian citizens who hold to
any religious faith at all, much less biblical Christianity.
Sweden's rejection of Christian morality and biblical teachings
on sexuality is now obvious for all to see. Marriage is fast
disappearing in the nation, as children are routinely born out
of wedlock, couples commonly cohabitate, and homosexuality has
been normalized.
This is the inevitable consequence of
Europe's loss of faith. When vital Christianity disappears,
commitment to biblical morality quickly evaporates. The Bible
then becomes a text that must be silenced and biblical preaching
becomes a crime. This massive reversal of moral logic defies the
imagination, even as this prosecution of a Christian pastor
raises the specter of a new wave of persecution against
believers.
The recent expansion of hate crimes laws in
Canada, intended to outlaw all criticism of homosexuality, is
convincing proof that these trends are not limited to Europe.
The logic of restrictions on free speech is clear. The issue of
homosexuality has also become a test case for American civil
liberties. Where homosexual behavior was once characterized as
sodomy and thus criminalized, some now openly call for the
criminalizing of all "hate speech" addressed to homosexuals.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Senate passed a hate crimes
provision attached to a defense appropriation bill. Sponsored by
senators Ted Kennedy [D-MA] and Gordon Smith [R-OR], the law
would have levied fines against anyone found to have committed a
crime that is "motivated by prejudice based on the race, color,
religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, or
disability of the victim." The provision passed the Senate, but
died in the conference process with the House of
Representatives. Nevertheless, the fact that the bill passed in
the Senate sends the nation an urgent warning, and the logical
jump from "hate crimes" legislation to codes against "hate
speech" is small indeed.
Where this leads, of course, is to the
eradication of all criticism of homosexuality itself. In part,
the logic of hate crimes legislation is driven by the
therapeutic culture, which translates every important issue into
a matter of emotional response. Accordingly, assertions that
homosexuality is sinful are now criticized as harmful to the
emotional health and comfort of those engaged in the homosexual
lifestyle.
Thus,
in the name of sensitivity, tolerance, and political
correctness, such offensive speech must be eliminated, the
pulpit must be silenced, and faithful pastors are now fair
targets for condemnation and, eventually, for criminal
prosecution. Pastors in Sweden are now on notice--if you preach
what the Bible teaches about homosexuality, you will go to jail.
The watching world and the praying church must bear witness to
this violation of conscience. We are now witnesses to the
criminalizing of Christianity
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