The Satanic Temple, a Satanist group based out of New York, has
revealed a design of a 7-foot statue, including a pentagram, a
"goat-headed Baphomet," and two children looking on, which would join an
already-constructed monument commemorating the Ten Commandments on the
lawn of Oklahoma's state capitol.
The Oklahoma legislators approved the privately-funded Ten
Commandments statue in 2009, a move that was immediately faced with an
ACLU lawsuit. Incidentally, the lawsuit, which hopes to remove the Ten
Commandments statue, now stands in the way of approval for the Satanists
and other groups: the Oklahoma City Preservation Committee voted to ban
construction of new monuments on capitol grounds until a judge rules on
the case.
Philly.com reports on the Satanist statue controversy:
“The statue will serve as a beacon
calling for compassion and empathy among all living creatures,” said
spokesman Lucian Greaves. “The statue will also have a functional
purpose as a chair where people of all ages may sit on the lap of Satan
for inspiration and contemplation.”...
"Either way you cut it, this is a First Amendment issue," Greaves said. "Once they open that door, they can't discriminate."...
Greaves assured the Satanists’ monument would be “in good taste and consistent with community standards.”
He also noted that there were a surprising amount of Oklahomans
interested in constructing the statue. Still, state legislators have
decided that the Satanists may not build their statue alongside the Ten
Commandments, though their decision is moot until the ACLU lawsuit is
up.
Lucian Greaves summed up the importance of Satanism, and its deserved place alongside the capitol, eloquently:
“Medieval witch-hunts taught us to adopt
presumption of innocence, secular law, and a more substantive burden of
proof,” he said.
“Today, we are rightly offended by the
notion of blasphemy laws and divine fiats. Acknowledging wrongful
persecutions has helped shape the legal system that preserves the
sovereignty of our skeptics, heretics, and the misunderstood. It has
shaped a proud culture of tolerance and free inquiry. This is to be a
historical marker commemorating the scapegoats, the marginalized, the
demonized minority, and the unjustly outcast.”
What do you think of the Satanist statue?
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