jonks
Lifer
- Feb 7, 2005
- 13,918
- 20
- 81
Originally posted by: piasabird
Christ was born in April???
April 1, specifically.
Originally posted by: piasabird
Christ was born in April???
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Whatever. Jesus did it to guilt trip us all for the next thousand years.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Whatever. Jesus did it to guilt trip us all for the next thousand years.
The guilt trip is all your own. You feel too worthless to accept that you have been forgiven for all that guilt you carry and for which you never really were guilty in the first place. It is this world that told you you are worthless, not God. But don't feel lonely, not many Christians have that much faith that they actually transcend their feelings of guilt. Faith is not something you profess. Real faith transforms, it makes what Christians call Saints. Thy Will gets done on Earth as it is in Heaven because heaven and earth to the Saint are the same.
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Whatever. Jesus did it to guilt trip us all for the next thousand years.
The guilt trip is all your own. You feel too worthless to accept that you have been forgiven for all that guilt you carry and for which you never really were guilty in the first place. It is this world that told you you are worthless, not God. But don't feel lonely, not many Christians have that much faith that they actually transcend their feelings of guilt. Faith is not something you profess. Real faith transforms, it makes what Christians call Saints. Thy Will gets done on Earth as it is in Heaven because heaven and earth to the Saint are the same.
Howcome you always want to tell other people what they're thinking, rather than actually asserting your own opinion?
I don't feel worthless at all. I feel great! At least 10 times greater than an Arab.
Consciously? It was my understanding that dying on the cross to somehow atone for humanity's sins was pretty well Jesus' only purpose for being sent to Earth. How exactly being tortured and then nailed to two pieces of wood is supposed to erase sins, I have no idea. But it's not really a conscious decision if your reason to exist is to die on a cross. God already knows the ending before he's loaded the DVD in the player.Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Nebor
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
Whatever. Jesus did it to guilt trip us all for the next thousand years.
The guilt trip is all your own. You feel too worthless to accept that you have been forgiven for all that guilt you carry and for which you never really were guilty in the first place. It is this world that told you you are worthless, not God. But don't feel lonely, not many Christians have that much faith that they actually transcend their feelings of guilt. Faith is not something you profess. Real faith transforms, it makes what Christians call Saints. Thy Will gets done on Earth as it is in Heaven because heaven and earth to the Saint are the same.
Howcome you always want to tell other people what they're thinking, rather than actually asserting your own opinion?
I don't feel worthless at all. I feel great! At least 10 times greater than an Arab.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Consciously? It was my understanding that dying on the cross to somehow atone for humanity's sins was pretty well Jesus' only purpose for being sent to Earth. How exactly being tortured and then nailed to two pieces of wood is supposed to erase sins, I have no idea. But it's not really a conscious decision if your reason to exist is to die on a cross. God already knows the ending before he's loaded the DVD in the player.Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think the true meaning of Christmas is to celebrate the birth of a human being who took on consciously, the job of dying on the cross so that millions of other souls could realize that their self hate is a lie and that God is there in all our hearts. It is a celebration, I think, of a man whose love was so great he died so you could live and love instead.
This celebration existed before Christianity even existed. The winter solstice was the time when the days began to get longer. In ancient times, winter was a potentially deadly season. Its exit was certainly cause for celebration - a "resurrection" of the springtime, and of life that had gone dormant in the months before. To modernize the religion, so it seemed less like pagan rituals of times past, it was personified. Now the return of a season is not celebrated, but instead, the return of a person, a person made out to be divine in some way.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
This celebration existed before Christianity even existed. The winter solstice was the time when the days began to get longer. In ancient times, winter was a potentially deadly season. Its exit was certainly cause for celebration - a "resurrection" of the springtime, and of life that had gone dormant in the months before. To modernize the religion, so it seemed less like pagan rituals of times past, it was personified. Now the return of a season is not celebrated, but instead, the return of a person, a person made out to be divine in some way.
That's an awful lot of what-if's though.Originally posted by: Moonbeam
What if there is a form of awakening, a god conscious state, that is our true selves, one that is buried by self hate? What if, like in a room of sleeping and awake people, those who are awake know each other and those who are asleep know nothing? Now suppose such awakened people got together with a plan to awaken all humanity, a plan that would require millennia. What if all the sacred texts and predictions of what was to come were pre-arranged and fulfilled by members of such a club of seers? What if Jesus was part of such a plan?
It relates back to my idea on the purpose of life - the Universe itself is quite indifferent toward you. If you want purpose in life, you must create purpose yourself, and only then may you strive to fulfill it. Causes for celebration are similar to this, in that we give occasions meaning and significance, we are the ones who say whether or not they are worthy of celebration.Originally posted by: Madwand1
It's no more than the standard and typical divisiveness of mankind which dates things from the birth of Christ as if there was no history before then, and even focuses a hybrid celebration such as Christmas/Yule into just the celebration of Christ per se. These are artificial and tribal distinctions in my opinion.
What's there to celebrate in a gruesome historical death? What's there to celebrate in the ordinary, cyclic and predictable workings of nature? Not much.. But there is much to celebrate in his message of love, and there was much to celebrate about survival in harsh climates through social efforts.
The spirit of Christmas or Yule, or what have you is very much alive when we think of others and how we might make them happy.
Cheers.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Consciously? It was my understanding that dying on the cross to somehow atone for humanity's sins was pretty well Jesus' only purpose for being sent to Earth. How exactly being tortured and then nailed to two pieces of wood is supposed to erase sins, I have no idea. But it's not really a conscious decision if your reason to exist is to die on a cross. God already knows the ending before he's loaded the DVD in the player.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
This celebration existed before Christianity even existed. The winter solstice was the time when the days began to get longer. In ancient times, winter was a potentially deadly season. Its exit was certainly cause for celebration - a "resurrection" of the springtime, and of life that had gone dormant in the months before. To modernize the religion, so it seemed less like pagan rituals of times past, it was personified. Now the return of a season is not celebrated, but instead, the return of a person, a person made out to be divine in some way.
Originally posted by: MadRat
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Consciously? It was my understanding that dying on the cross to somehow atone for humanity's sins was pretty well Jesus' only purpose for being sent to Earth. How exactly being tortured and then nailed to two pieces of wood is supposed to erase sins, I have no idea. But it's not really a conscious decision if your reason to exist is to die on a cross. God already knows the ending before he's loaded the DVD in the player.
God gave his only Son over to humanity as a sacrifice. The death of Jesus was a fulfillment of a promise made to Adam and Eve. The whole premise of the sacrifice dates back to God's proclamation after he confronted Adam and Eve on their sin of eating from the tree in the center of the Garden of Eden. They could not re-enter into Paradise as long as they lived because of their sins. If you follow the story in the book of Adam and Eve then you find out that they actually committed suicide as an offering of atonement to God. Afterwards God raised them from the dead and gave them a covenant that he would one day sacrifice his ownself in order to bridge the gap between God and Man once more. Jesus fulfilled this covenant. The book of Adam and Eve is pretty well ignored by christianity nowadays due to its apocryphal nature, but it was very popular all the way up to the middle ages.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
This celebration existed before Christianity even existed. The winter solstice was the time when the days began to get longer. In ancient times, winter was a potentially deadly season. Its exit was certainly cause for celebration - a "resurrection" of the springtime, and of life that had gone dormant in the months before. To modernize the religion, so it seemed less like pagan rituals of times past, it was personified. Now the return of a season is not celebrated, but instead, the return of a person, a person made out to be divine in some way.
I'm not so sure I understand your explanation here. The reason for choosing the last day of the old calendar had nothing to do with the winter solstice. The birth of the Savior is the mark of a new age. The day was chosen to mark the end of a year symbolizing the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of The Word. The church asserts Christ's life during the celebratry period between the Christmas and the Ascension holy days.
Originally posted by: PSUstoekl
"Yule is a winter festival associated with the winter solstice celebrated in northern Europe since ancient times. Its Christianized form is called "Christmas", which is essentially the symbolism and traditions of Yule with the Christian story of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth superimposed upon it. Yule traditions include decorating a fir or spruce tree, burning a Yule log, the hanging of mistletoe and holly, giving gifts, and general celebration and merriment."
Hm.
Wikipedia
Originally posted by: Noobtastic
Originally posted by: PSUstoekl
"Yule is a winter festival associated with the winter solstice celebrated in northern Europe since ancient times. Its Christianized form is called "Christmas", which is essentially the symbolism and traditions of Yule with the Christian story of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth superimposed upon it. Yule traditions include decorating a fir or spruce tree, burning a Yule log, the hanging of mistletoe and holly, giving gifts, and general celebration and merriment."
Hm.
Wikipedia
Yes, all things associated with Christmas are sourced from PAGANISM. You know that tree in your living room? Pagan.
Also, going to church, listening to sermons, and having pastors are all sourced from PAGANISM.
This is general knowledge and I'd be shocked if any of didn't know.
edit: Don't think I lack the ability to appreciate the overall message of Christmas, but it's VERY misleading. Jesus was not born on Dec. 25th, in fact, there is no evidence that Jesus April-March (Easter).
Christmas is far from Christian, and far from anything religious. It has been corrupted by the masses, exploited with materialistic bulls**t and Hollywood movies.
It is simply an excuse to give/receive presents.