Church and state reconcile! After lengthy separation, couple back together again. (Viewpoint).
Blake, Russell
The Door Magazine News Service--In Washington D.C., this week,
Church and State announced through their representatives that they have
agreed to reunite after a long separation.
Spokeswoman for the Church, Sister Mary-Francis, and spokesman for
the State, Stanley Wright, made the joint announcement.
"This long, bleak period in world history is at an end,"
Wright exclaimed loudly.
Mary-Frances added that the couple was in seclusion making up for
lost time.
"They know it may be rocky at first, but they're
committed to making their relationship work this time," she told
reporters.
The spokeswoman added that the couple is optimistic and is making
many plans for the future.
"I know they plan on trying to reclaim their old spark,"
she said, a twinkle in her eye. "When I met with them this morning,
they spoke fondly of the inquisitions and crusades they had enjoyed
together early in their marriage."
Wright expounded on plans for the future, saying that his client
hoped to appoint "a Minister of Faith" before the end of the
week. "Depending on how things work out," Mr. Wright
explained, "the State hopes to follow up that with appointments of
both a Minister of Thought-Control and a Secretary of Sacraments."
Friends of the couple were overjoyed at news of the couple's
revival. The Rev. Jerry Falwell said he was "thrilled by this
wonderful miracle.
"I've been trying to get them to reconcile for
decades," he told reporters. "I've be thwarted by
love-hating instigators like the ACLU and other liberal heathens, but
now God's glory shines on us all."
"It's wonderful," U.S. Attorney General and longtime
friend of the Church John Ashcroft exclaimed, "I've been
telling [the Church] to reunite with [the State] for years."
Ashcroft said he was highly optimistic about the future. "I
know one of the first things [the Church] wants to do is put the Bible
back in schools and get [the State] to make welfare mothers wear a
scarlet W on their clothes. But I have even bigger plans for the
future," the exuberant son of a preacher said. "Now that
they're back together, I hope we can get rid of that whole damn
Bill of Rights once and for all!"
The couple's two children, Intolerance and Persecution,
who'd kept a low profile in recent decades, were unavailable for
immediate comment.
But, as Wright put it, "I think you'll be seeing a lot
more of those two in the days to come, as they celebrate the happy union
of their parents once more."
Reprinted with permission from The Door Magazine, a publication
that describes itself as "the world's pretty much only
religious satire magazine." (www.TheDoorMagazine.com)