Conspiracy of Catholicism, page
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reply posted on 24-8-2004 @ 08:55 PM by Nygdan
Originally posted by godservant
What about the sign of the cross in front of the crucifix.


The person doing it is not worshipping the cross

What about wearing the crucifix on a necklace.


Its a necklace. Do you think people with those little jesus fish on their cars are sinners too?

What about the fact that Christ is no longer on the cross, but risen - he is not on the cross anymore.


What about it? Are you seriously suggesting that Catholics are worshipping the cross?


What about the actions of the priests around these statues?


What actions are you talking about?

someone decided to make statues and someone decided to get rid of books - some say even modify the ones they've kept.

If the catholic church didn't want the bible to exist then it wouldn't. They certainly wouldn't've had monks all across europe dutifully copying it. If the RCC is anti-bible, then you wouldn't have a bible. You might have something like the dead sea scrolls, or the strange pseudo-christian texts that obscurely exist now.

There are many secrets in the catholic church - why?


What secrets?

I am not trying to offend anyone - this is my opinion, and opinions can change.


Let me tell you plainly that Catholics do not worship statues, crosses, rosaries, or any of the other paraphanelia that they have. They worship jesus and the rest of the Holy Trinity. Sure, the RCC isn't perfect, but catholics most certainly aren't worshiping graven images.

Also consider that the Great Schism occured (in part anyway) because hard liners in what wold become the RCC objected to the use of Icons as worshipping graven images, however I don't think any Orthodox christian is going to say that they worship a triptysch over the trinity.


reply posted on 25-8-2004 @ 02:29 PM by blanketgirl
Originally posted by LadyV
Weeeeeeeeeeeelllll, while were on this subject, could some one explainsomething to me, I have asked this on boards before nad I have mentioned it on this one asdn of course everyone skips over it.

1) Why was it necessary for there to be 'any" type of a sacrifice to god? For what purpose does killing an animal hold, for a god that can create with a thought? What was derived from it?


Nobody really knows exactly where it came from, but *everyone* used to do it. It's not a select group- from most of what I've read and seen in association with the actual sacrifices, I think it was the thought that if they did something bad- they would kill the animal and be relieved of the vengeance of the gods.

Have you ever read of the ancient Jewish ritual where a goat was taken into the temple- everyone laid their sins on to the goat and then it was run out of town? (this is where the term scapegoat comes from) It was led out of town and made to run off a cliff, supposedly dying and taking with it the sins of the community so they could start anew.
There were also sacrifices that are more like offerings, where an animal could have been killed to offer to a god to please him/her.


2) Why would a person have to die and shed blood for someone else's sins? Why would a god have to give up a child for this? A god can do or cause anything by thinking it, after all, that's supposedly how he created the heavens and the earth...why was this an absolute necessity to happen, for what?

If an animal could take their sins with it and relieve the sinners of their wrongs, wouldn't a person be a logical step up? Obviously, they could better embody your sins. It's like the ultimate sacrifice...

It might help you to learn about all savior myths rather than just the Jesus one. The idea that a god would send down their child in human form who sacrificed themselves is a common mythology. Even most of the life-stories of Jesus are common stories to hundreds of individuals who lived hundreds or thousands of years before Jesus would have. This is a huge part of why most scholars who aren't completely going off of faith can't answer whether Jesus really was a person or not. There is very little non-christian evidence of an historical Jesus, and that which there is wasn't documented for a good 70-80 years minumum... that's 70+ years for it to be word of mouth and gossip before anybody got around to recording it.


As to not creating images and doing it anyway.....get real! The Christian bible says, not to lust in your heart, "most" Christians do it anyway, do not lie, cheat and steal, "most" professed Christians do it anyway, do not judge others, "most" do it anyway...this list could go on and on....


I'm wondering if you are missing the point of some of those guidelines. The point is that as humans we do these things, but to be righteous and holy we must teach ourselves not to and strive to be better in these ways. It is not to say you are terrible if you do them, just that you need to work on fixing it.
Now as for the Christians who don't even try to better themselves... some people just think they are Christian because they were raised to think it-
it is also much easier to claim something than to actually be or do it. According to the US census, a catholic church claims me as a member because I was confirmed when I was 14. I'm sure they don't mention that at the beginning of the ceremony I went up to the priest and told him "I don't believe any of this crap and don't want to be Christian." His response was that it wasn't my decision, it was my parent's choice because I was a minor.

So- I am "christian" but then again I'm goddess-worshipping hippie at the same time...


reply posted on 25-8-2004 @ 08:33 PM by Nygdan
Originally posted by LadyV
1) Why was it necessary for there to be 'any" type of a sacrifice to god?


I can't imagine what possible purpose it could serve. However, logic shouldn't be applied to metaphysical systems I think. Or at least, being 'illogical' isn't much of a criticism of irrational systems. Any religion, ultimately, is a matter of faith, which, pretty obviously, need pay attention to reason.


2) Why would a person have to die and shed blood for someone else's sins?


Ah, I suspect here you are specifically refering to jesus. The interesting thing is that there are multiple myths of a 'god' who dies, (often associated with a tree or pole, in this case a cross) is buried for some time, is resurected, and then consumed. Christian theology follows this globally recurrent pattern, with crucifition, death, burial, resurection, and communion with transubstantiation. It looks like this rite is also associated with creative myths in some of the 'older' religions, often apparently being played out by a trio (or I should say a trinity) of women, ie persephone, demeter, and the moon goddess, with persephone going tothe underworld, returning, and the 'crops' reappearing (via demter) and being consumed. Anyway I am reading Campbell's Primitive Mythology, and some of that is the arguement he is making where I am in it. He also notes that the Elusian mysteries, probably associated with Demeter, had, as a culmination of one of the rites (at least, as is told in some sources) the rasing of a freshly cut ear of grain to the sounds of gongs. Juxtapose this to the raising of the eucharist to the tinkling of bells. Well, if you are into juxtaposing stuff that is.

So my point for that ramble was that the 'myth' is a traditional oft repeated theme involving man's own mortality and such.

"most" Christians do it anyway

Certainly. But either way, catholics are not worshiping statues in their churches. They can certainly perform their masses without the statues and in a plain white walled room.

blanketgirl:
Have you ever read of the ancient Jewish ritual where a goat was taken into the temple- everyone laid their sins on to the goat and then it was run out of town

Scapegoat eh?

There is very little non-christian evidence of an historical Jesus


Josephus supposedly mentions someone that might be him. But in reality, why should there be any mention of the quickly executed leader of a small and not terribly succesful religious sect?
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