The European Commission filed a claim with the European Court of Justice regarding the Hungarian Child Protection Act. As you know, this law passed last year prohibits the introduction and distribution of LGBTQ content among those under the age of 18.
I am not a lawyer, especially not a specialist lawyer, so I have no idea what the legal consequences would be if the European Court of Justice were to win the case. But as a Christian, I am particularly concerned, and even filled with fear, that the European Court of Justice has raised the culture battle around sexual orientations and gender identities to a legal level. In doing so, he unspokenly stated that one of the ideological pillars of the European Union is the worldview on which the LGBTQ ideology is founded, and that the long-term dominant position of this worldview must also be established through the means of legal coercion. And this must be achieved by interrupting the tradition-fixed process of passing on the Judeo-Christian image of man, and driving a wedge between the generations, even with the coercive power of the law, so that the younger generations can get to know the gender ideology that replaces the traditional image of man, based on gender ideology. eliminating image of man.
The argument is of course based on the slogan of the elusive "European values" and "human rights", and it is justified by the fact that it is time to implement a European children's rights strategy, one of the fundamental ideological tools of which is the dissemination of gender ideology among minors. All of this is, so to speak, because the process of traditional education up until now has in fact only given children "prejudices", "stereotypes" about men, women, marriage and the family, thus depriving them of their alleged rights, since they were not allowed to learn about sexual and the rich, rainbow possibilities of finding a gender path, and they were forced into the yoke of tradition. Thus, making LGBTQ ideology accessible is a means of "liberating" children, an act of children's rights, which necessarily fits into the European world of values, and even follows directly from it. Education based on Christian values is therefore a deprivation of rights, and must therefore be sanctioned. So when, for example, a Reformed pastor asks the parents and godparents at baptism whether they raise and bring up their child in such a way that he, that is, the child, when he grows up, will voluntarily confess his faith, then in effect he excludes the child from the wide range of options . It is therefore better to break this chain of transmission of the Christian world of values, so that conservative-Christian generations do not tell the child what is a man and what is a woman, what is a father and what is a mother, because these are, so to speak, simple prejudices.
Well, this is serious. This means not only that children must be freed from the "captivity" of traditional educational institutions (family, school, church), but
Anyone who blocks their child from gender sensitization is committing a crime.
We are already far beyond the question of whether Christianity can still play a historical role in shaping the cultural character of European societies. Today, it is not difficult to imagine an age when Christianity will be universally punishable and quoting the Bible a crime. We already knew about individual cases, but the EC's legal action against Hungary clearly shows that this is a stealthy, legally based process, the ultimate goal of which is to criminalize Christianity.
Of course, I don't think this is the end of the story. I'm already waiting to see when the silent but sane part of Christianity (and I think this is the majority) will rebel against the open dictatorial attempts of the EC's distorted, extreme liberalism.
Source: László Köntös/mandiner.hu
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