K
KarenNC
Guest
**As for the Flood narrative, are you aware that HMC does not teach that Genesis is literal? **
I am afraid that you will need to clarify the acronym HMC for me. Is it possibly "Holy Mother Church?’ It may help you to remember that, while I have read a fair bit about Catholicism and known many Catholics, I have never been one and may not know all the Catholic-specific shorthand (though this forum is widening that knowledge
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You will note that I asked “am I correct…?” I have heard the specific argument I described many times from Christians who are strict literalists. I know that some Christians believe that Genesis is literal, some do not. There are plenty on this forum that have argued the literal interpretation of much of the Christian Bible. I have met (either IRL or online) many Catholics (and other Christians) on both sides of the issue. That is why I asked if you did as a point of clarification. Such a literalist view seemed at odds with your other posts, so I wanted to be sure I did not misunderstand.
** And my faith has not been shaken. My faith, if anything, has been confirmed by my anthropology and history. **
Good. Ideally that is what happens to all of us.
It is unfortunate in my opinion that there are so many Christians ** and** followers of various Neopagn religions who are raised or taught with such blinders to the rest of history that when they do encounter such, it causes an intense (and in my mind wholly preventable) crisis of faith. It is an issue for the Neopagan who is confronted with the actual scholarship on the witch hunts of history (rather than the “burning times” mythos) as for the Christian who, believing that Christianity is absolutely unique in having a dying and rising deity or flood myth, to discover that other cultures had them as well.
**And you are trying to ressurect a long dead religion which has no connection with the past - no priesthood for over a thousand years. **
I will agree there has been no priesthood, but I would hardly say that my religion has no connection to the past. Remember that I am the one who follows a Hellenic religion. It is not identical to Wicca or to many other religions that fall under the umbrella of Neopaganism. If Christian worship were to lapse for a specific period of time, would your God cease to exist or be worthy of worship?
As to other arguments, not necessarily yours, that I am not worshipping the Gods in the same way that the ancient Greeks did, the idea of a new relationship with deity should not be a foreign one to Christians. The basis for Christianity is that your God made a significantly different covenant, with different expectations, ways of worship, etc than He did with the Jews.
** Frankly, y’all, if I were so inclined, I’d have better results using H.P. Lovecraft and worshiping Cthulhu.**
Nah, too many tentacles
Seriously, I think that most people would be willing to admit that there is a bit of difference in worshipping Gods that were worshipped actively for many centuries, and whose images and stories have been very powerful and present in our culture throughout the last two millenia despite that lack of active worship, with a fictional character in a book by a 20th century author of “weird fiction” that did not claim to be other than such.
** What is the difference between neopaginism and Scientology? Tell me that.**
Money?
Seriously, which particular Neopagan religion would you like for me to use as a comparison? There are some that I can discuss in an informed manner and some I cannot. As for Scientology, I have only a passing acquaintance with it, through my husband’s grandmother. The teachings I have encountered have not appealed sufficiently to me that I felt a need to really investigate further, so I may not be the best one to make an informed comparison.
I am afraid that you will need to clarify the acronym HMC for me. Is it possibly "Holy Mother Church?’ It may help you to remember that, while I have read a fair bit about Catholicism and known many Catholics, I have never been one and may not know all the Catholic-specific shorthand (though this forum is widening that knowledge
You will note that I asked “am I correct…?” I have heard the specific argument I described many times from Christians who are strict literalists. I know that some Christians believe that Genesis is literal, some do not. There are plenty on this forum that have argued the literal interpretation of much of the Christian Bible. I have met (either IRL or online) many Catholics (and other Christians) on both sides of the issue. That is why I asked if you did as a point of clarification. Such a literalist view seemed at odds with your other posts, so I wanted to be sure I did not misunderstand.
** And my faith has not been shaken. My faith, if anything, has been confirmed by my anthropology and history. **
Good. Ideally that is what happens to all of us.
It is unfortunate in my opinion that there are so many Christians ** and** followers of various Neopagn religions who are raised or taught with such blinders to the rest of history that when they do encounter such, it causes an intense (and in my mind wholly preventable) crisis of faith. It is an issue for the Neopagan who is confronted with the actual scholarship on the witch hunts of history (rather than the “burning times” mythos) as for the Christian who, believing that Christianity is absolutely unique in having a dying and rising deity or flood myth, to discover that other cultures had them as well.
**And you are trying to ressurect a long dead religion which has no connection with the past - no priesthood for over a thousand years. **
I will agree there has been no priesthood, but I would hardly say that my religion has no connection to the past. Remember that I am the one who follows a Hellenic religion. It is not identical to Wicca or to many other religions that fall under the umbrella of Neopaganism. If Christian worship were to lapse for a specific period of time, would your God cease to exist or be worthy of worship?
As to other arguments, not necessarily yours, that I am not worshipping the Gods in the same way that the ancient Greeks did, the idea of a new relationship with deity should not be a foreign one to Christians. The basis for Christianity is that your God made a significantly different covenant, with different expectations, ways of worship, etc than He did with the Jews.
** Frankly, y’all, if I were so inclined, I’d have better results using H.P. Lovecraft and worshiping Cthulhu.**
Nah, too many tentacles
Seriously, I think that most people would be willing to admit that there is a bit of difference in worshipping Gods that were worshipped actively for many centuries, and whose images and stories have been very powerful and present in our culture throughout the last two millenia despite that lack of active worship, with a fictional character in a book by a 20th century author of “weird fiction” that did not claim to be other than such.
** What is the difference between neopaginism and Scientology? Tell me that.**
Money?
Seriously, which particular Neopagan religion would you like for me to use as a comparison? There are some that I can discuss in an informed manner and some I cannot. As for Scientology, I have only a passing acquaintance with it, through my husband’s grandmother. The teachings I have encountered have not appealed sufficiently to me that I felt a need to really investigate further, so I may not be the best one to make an informed comparison.