Scalia in the South

Published on April 8, 2005

Speaking at a Red Mass banquet in Shreveport, Louisiana, Justice Antonin Scalia derided the conception of “acceptable religion” among educated sophisticates in the North; instead praising the ground he stood on: the unsnobbish South where orthodox believers and “traditional Christians” are not written off as simple-minded. “‘One can be sophisticated and believe in Jesus as […]

Speaking at a Red Mass banquet in Shreveport, Louisiana, Justice Antonin Scalia derided the conception of “acceptable religion” among educated sophisticates in the North; instead praising the ground he stood on: the unsnobbish South where orthodox believers and “traditional Christians” are not written off as simple-minded. “‘One can be sophisticated and believe in Jesus as in someway a “son of God.” But to believe in traditional Christianity is something else,'” said Scalia, who continued to quote scripture passages warning that the worldly-wise wouldn’t accept Christianity.

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