Categories
Coronavirus Evangelical Stuff Featured News

Religious Exemption for Mandatory COVID-19 Vaccinations: A Printable PDF+ A Plea for Pastors to Sign a Petition

As a service to our brothers and sisters in Christ, we have created a printable and downloadable PDF that contains a religious exemption for mandatory Covid-19 vaccinations.

Many religious exemptions have been made available online for those who wish to maintain autonomy over their body for whatever reason that accords to their conscience. Some of them, which seek to provide religious exemptions, are very good. Some, without a doubt, twist Scripture. Some go so far as to sell religious exemptions or trade them in exchange for online church membership, which earns our strongest rebuke.

Seeing these tragedies, including both the mandatory violations of bodily autonomy and the simony of sold religious exemptions, many of which are not doctrinally sound, we asked twelve (or so) of the best pastors and theologians we know to begin forwarding me their Biblical reasons for legitimate religious exemptions that do not twist Scripture, but use it appropriately. With JD Hall being the publisher of the Gideon Knox Group, we have access to some of the best theologians in the world who happily agreed to send their thoughts, suggestions, and arguments for a Biblical case against forced vaccinations.

We then began to sort through the Scriptural argumentation for bodily autonomy, and have provided the best vaccine religious exemptions we could theologically muster.

In collating these religious arguments for bodily autonomy, we leaned heavily upon chapter-and-verse citation of the Holy Scripture, scriptural deduction, Protestant religious tradition, and logic – a gift of General Revelation given by God to all men that show his power and attributes.

In order to use this religious exemption, we ask that you sincerely hold to its Biblical attributes and do so with genuine intentions; it is not designed for the irreligious. Many arguments can be made for bodily autonomy outside God’s Special Revelation (IE the Holy Bible), including those provided by the U.S., state, or other Constitutions.

Furthermore, let us state that this religious exemption has intentionally been kept short and easy to read for the layman, presuming that employers with little religious training may place themselves into the position of judge to read it and determine its veracity (Matthew 7:6). It has, therefore, been kept on an elementary level for their benefit, rather than that of those using the religious exemption.

Likewise, we have created this petition for use by those with established religious credentials. We provide this document as a place for clergy members (including pastors and chaplains) to indicate their agreement that all those who claim a religious exemption as here described are, under God, rightly entitled to that exemption.

Every shepherd that signs will give credibility to a hundred sheep behind them.

Please sign this petition only if you are a clergy member. After signing the petition, you will be prompted to leave a comment. Please use the comment space to provide your name and information about your qualifications and ordination to Christian ministry.


This document is also available to view and download HERE

Categories
Coronavirus Critical Race Theory Featured News

Ivy League University Mandates Vaccine to Attend, but Only for White Students

One of the most prestigious universities in the country is mandating that any student attending and studying must get vaccinated with the flu shot and provide proof of medical documentation before they are allowed to return for classes in the new year.

That is, any white students.

Cornell University instituted the mandatory vaccine program back in the fall semester and continuing into 2021 as part of the school’s “Behavioral Compact” designed to keep medical services and resources available for COVID-19 cases, and not be taxed by the flu.

Unless your skin is a certain color, in which case you may tax away.

The Ivy League school is offering a race-based exemption, with black students, indigenous students, and other persons of color exempt from having to be vaccinated and provide proof, due to “historical injustices” perpetrated on them by white folk.

Cornell’s Health page “especially for students of color,” explains why this doesn’t apply to black and brown students:

We recognize that, due to longstanding systemic racism and health inequities in this country, individuals from some marginalized communities may have concerns about needing to agree to such requirements. For example, historically, the bodies the of Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color (BIPOC) have been mistreated, and used by people in power, sometimes for profit or medical gain. It is understandable that the current Compact requirements may feel suspect or even exploitative to some BIPOC members of the Cornell community. Additionally, recent acts of violence against Black people by law enforcement may contribute to feelings of distrust or powerlessness.

While the university still strongly desires BIPOC students get vaccinated, any persons of color will be given an exception if they cite their racial identity as a cause for wanting to decline.

If you’re white. however, no such luck.

Prepare for the needle.