But her point is that they're still using Jesus' birth as the dividing line, regardless of the terminology used. If someone asked, "When did the Common Era begin?" the answer is still, "It started when Jesus was born."
Unless something else happened that year worth noting, it's still about Jesus.
I understand that. And as I said before, I don't have a problem with that: the birth of Jesus of Nazareth was an event of world-historical significance.
The
problem, as I
also said before, is that the terms "BC" and AD" are freighted with
religious significance, rather than merely
historical significance
People who don't believe that Jesus of Nazareth was Jesus
Christ--that is to say, Jesus the Messiah--have objected to having to date things from "Before Christ".
Similarly, people who don't believe that Jesus of Nazareth is "the Lord" object to having to date things in "the year of the Lord."
Using either expression is tantamount to confessing that Jesus Christ is Lord.
To understand how objectionable that might be to some people, I ask others to consider how they might feel if they were expected to use the dating system adopted by the Church of Satan, in which this is the Year XLIV AS--that is to say, the forty-fourth year of Satan.
Or, consider my earlier suggestion to make the year 1543 the year zero. How would Christians on this board feel if they were expected, not only to use this year as an epoch, but to use the expressions "Religious Darkness (RD)" for years before zero, and "Scientific Enlightenment (SE)" for years afterward?
They wouldn't like that very much at all, I'd wager. And yet here we have people saying it's no big deal when
others have to do something like that, and even saying that it's "silly" to object. In my opinion, that's a selfish and complacent position.