This is a no-brainer. The message Phelps and his gang    is spewing is despicable and obscene. It shows absolutely no respect for    the sanctity of life and therefore can’t possibly be considered coming    from a “church.” And as we know, a religion based on fear can only    motivate and attract people for all the wrong reasons.
  
  Nevertheless, his message is protected by the Constitution, the same    Constitution that allows us to preach and proclaim the truths we expound    in the name of religion. We’ve seen this tested over and over.
  
  I remember in the late 1970s when American Nazis tried to march through    Skokie, Ill., primarily because of the large Jewish population and    Holocaust survivors living there. It was the American Civil Liberties    Union that went to bat for the Nazis. All in the name of this freedom,    which continues to be used and abused by the U.S. population.
  
  This last month, I personally felt the hate speech that was spewed out    against the Armenians by challenges to the reality of genocide (in    reference to H.R. 106). I heard the obscenities spoken against my faith,    by the likes of Kathy Griffin in her infamous Emmy acceptance speech.    These examples are completely in line with Phelps and his followers. As    upset and disgusted as I get, I know the answer is not to ban this    speech. This freedom is the foundation of our society, and that freedom    is sacred.
  
  It is sad and sickening that people abuse freedom. What the faith    community must do in these instances is to focus on the greater ideals    that we serve.
  
  If we are convinced that goodness always triumphs over evil, we need to    combat hatred, as difficult as it may be, with acts and words of love.
  
  FATHER VAZKEN MOVSESIAN
  Armenian Church
  Youth Ministries
 
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