barmar, on 2017-May-07, 16:15, said:
Sharia Law is basically just the codification of Muslim traditions, much as the Talmud is codification of Jewish traditions.
Being against Sharia Law is essentially saying that Muslims should not be allowed to practice their religious traditions. It's analogous to saying that Christian marriages performed by priests were not legally binding, or that Jews should not be allowed to keep Kosher.
Does Sharia Law include some pronouncements and requirements that are no longer appropriate in modern society? It certainly does. But so does the Christian Bible. Many US legislators refer to the Bible to justify their arguments against homosexuality and abortion. Why is that permitted, yet they worry about Sharia Law?
I suspect that most people who are concerned about Sharia Law invading our country don't even know what it consists of. They just associate it with Islam, and conflate it with the ideals of radical groups like ISIS.
I confess to being a person who knows little about Sharia Law. But what you say does not sound right to me. Take your assertion "or that Jews should not be allowed to keep Kosher." Now I also am not too sure what it means to "keep Kosher". But for example say pork is forbidden. Or driving on Saturday. It s one thing to not eat pork or drive on Saturday. It is another thing to make it illegal to eat pork or drive on Saturday. The first I would call tradition or custom, the second I would call law. If a Muslim wishes to pray at a certain time of the day while facing in a certain direction, that's a custom that he can do. A law could require that I do it.
Of course there are U.S. laws based on Christian tradition. In Minnesota, when I was young, you could not buy alcoholic beverages on Sunday. Polygamy is illegal. Profanity in public used to be illegal, I am not sure if it still is. But most of us are reasonably accepting of most of these laws. I long ago came to regard most Christian theological claims, and theological claims of other religions also for that matter, as mostly untrue.Some of the history might be accurate, subject to checking. But I can reject theological claims of resurrection while still favoring monogamy. It's a bit tricky. I don't cite the Bible to justify my views on most matters, but I strongly suspect that I am a product of a society that over centuries has internalized the moral views, some at least, of Christian religion. Faith, hope and charity are good traits, even if Paul had never spoken on it.
Becky once lived in an area of California where mail was delivered on Sunday but not on Saturday. A lot of Seventh Day Adventists lived there, so accommodations were made. Accommodations such as that are easy enough to live with, others would be less so. I believe that the Seventh Day Advocates view card playing as a sin. My maternal grandmother was an Adventist, my mother liked to play poker and so, or perhaps for other reasons, she became a Presbyterian. Theologically, I walked away from it all. In terms of values, well, that's a more complicated issue. More than a few religious people agree with that.
I have little interest in telling others what they must do, but to live in a society we of necessity set some boundaries to behavior. I don't know if the Bible has an explicit position on dueling, but I am glad we no longer allow it.
This response wanders a bit, I know. I think tolerance of other people's customs comes naturally to me, but there is a line somewhere even of I have not thought it through just where that line is. And certainly part of this is whether they wish to practice their custom or to make it law that everyone must practice their custom.