P
Petergee
Guest
I can see that you are more thoughtful and intelligent than 99% of the “neo-pagans” I have come across. However I think you should seriously ask yourself if you aren’t still “rebelling” against your fundamentalist parents. I know quite a few people in their 50s, 60s, even their 70s, who are still stuch in a mindset of adolescent “rebellion” against what they say is the spiritual bullying they suffered from parents, priests and nuns in their youth (and their stories like “I was told I would go to Hell if I missed a comma when writing the Our Father” seem to grow with every telling). In their minds, these people see this bullying as still going on, even in priests who bend over backwards to avoid any suggestion of imposing their spiritual views on anyone.I fully understand that you believe all of that. Try to understand that I do not, and that my belief is grounded in thoughtful study, deep soul-searching, much reflection and concrete personal experience. My religion is not a philosophical or mental exercise. It is not a whim, an adolescent cry for attention, something with which to shock my parents (in my mid 40s is a bit late for that), an attempt to bend reality to my preference, a convenience or a protest against anyone else’s religion. It is a daily reality that sustains me and gives meaning to my life.
I too as a child had a fascination with the Greek pagan myths. They are indeed fascinating stories, many with a “message”. But it’s impossible to see them as anything other than stories.
It’s true that many Catholics in western countries say they don’t personally believe that the Bible is inerrant. Just like the majority of Catholics in Western countries miss Mass on any given Sunday although the Church teaches that to deliberately miss Sunday Mass is a mortal sin. But the Catholic church and all of the other major branches of Christianity hold that the Bible IS inerrant. And I’ve never heard of any Christian (or Jew or Moslem) who believes that NOTHING in the Old Testament really happened. I’d be very surprised if any “neo-pagan” would be willing to swear to the truth of, say, the stories of Pandora or Europa or indeed ANY of the pagan myths, or even any individual part of any myth. We KNOW God is real.
It’s great that you get warm fuzzy feelings from telling yourself that the pagan gods are real. But I ask again, where is your evidence? Feelings don’t count.
Yes, converts to Catholicism often say they have the feeling that they have come home. But their feelings are not what makes Catholicism true. Their minds UNDERSTAND that it is true through rational thought.
