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billcu1
Guest
I believe “El” was a cannanite god. I does go back to sumer. You remember how the children of Israel when “whoring after false gods”? Except for the priests and high priest the common “people” didn’t know who their god was. This goes back to Sumer and why we look up to god(s). They came from heaven to the earth. Spelt was “lowered from heaven by the gods” cf NephelimHi Gatewood,
If you find what I said harsh, it is because truth is hard, and it’s not always what we want to hear. But in this case there is no doubt that paganism and christianism are at odds, and very much opposites in belief and morals. We have had a variety of people who claim paganism as their choice and have gone into detail about their connection with satan if not worship of the same. Others have gods of all sorts depending on who they chose just as the ancient Romans and Greeks did. Just do a search on this site to hear what they have to say. I don’t include you in this because you are a christian but just don’t know it.
As for Elohim being plural, this is not applied to the God of the Old Testiment in the plurial
sense. This will help to explain why.
oce.catholic.com/index.php?title=Elohim
As far as idea of christians assimulating what pagans started, as if to say we were
accepting what they already knew, absolutely not. Our faith did not lean or grow from
their faith as if they were the starters and we the followers.
What really happened was that since pagans had their holidays
“…whoever lives and believes in me will never die…”
established in different parts of the world in different seasons, christians had none.
So the christians “baptised” established public holidays by turning them into something
that would honor the true God. Pagan “Sun” holiday the Christians transformed into the
“Son” day or Christmas, honoring the birth of Jesus. And so on. The Church continues
to do this down to the current day, accepting singing and other customs of the tribe or
nation and using them to glorify the true God. This dosen’t mean that they took
paganism and made it their own, but took what was culturally acceptable and used it.
This made it much easier for the people of the land to accept and feel at home with
christianity since the ideas which were presented to them they were already familiar with.
The end result was that the wrong ideas were being eliminated while the true faith was
replacing them. Thus no baggage and true evangelization taking place.