J
johnnyt3000
Guest
What characteristics would make someone a “Pagan”?
the word pagan can be used as a derogatory term, intending to show that your religion is superior to theirs.What characteristics would make someone a “Pagan”?
Not at all. The term pagan originated to distinguish between those who believe in the one God (Jews, Christians, and later Muslims) with those who do not. It is a word used to contrast, not to denigrate.the word pagan can be used as a derogatory term, intending to show that your religion is superior to theirs.
Yes it is offensive and derogatory. Hindus in India take great offense when Roman Catholics there brand them as pagans.Not at all.
I said that some (but not all) Hindus in India take offense at being called pagan by Christians. When used by some Christians, paganism refers to a false and possibly superstitious religion.Tom, for the sake of discussion, what exactly do you find offensive about the term? Is it that it implies that the beliefs of the person in question are false? Is it that it lumps different religions together, as if it matters not what they are, if they are not the true religion?
Okay, I took your remark, “Yes it is offensive and derogatory” as your own opinion. Do you self-identify as pagan?I said that some (but not all) Hindus in India take offense at being called pagan by Christians.
No. I am Catholic.Do you self-identify as pagan?
I tend to see the term embraced by the groups you highlighted who are coming from the West. This is especially true of those who are coming more out of the New Age movement mixed in with progressive/liberal political and cultural values.Also, not all forms of paganism actually pre-date Christianity. This has led to some pagan-related terms that highlight such distinctions, like paleo-paganism (which is likely to act as a retronym in reference to pagan groups no longer really in existence), Meso-Paganism (practices which may or may not pre-date Christianity which have some continuity from an indigenous population to the modern day), and Neo-Pagan (which tends to be more of a modern-day restoration-ish type of thing in some form or fashion).
I think that’s a fair point, paganism at least in the West tends to be religion that’s been conquered or muted by Christianity, and then maybe some people are trying to bring it back a little bit at a later time. It does seem like we have less respect for those religious practices than we do for the ones that Christianity hasn’t overwhelmed at any point.1.) Historical Baggage? After all, certain Christian sects in their weekly meetings/masses/ etc. especially the older ones, tend to celebrate the triumph of your Divinity against the forces of Paganism (here specifically meaning the wider religion of the Graeco-Roman world).
2.) The Devil You Know? Pun intended.
Many of the Axial Age religions tend to have rather sophisticated philosophical and ethical systems that while not exactly matching, tend to overlap in certain ways with the Christian worldview. If i may draw an analogy:
I’d like to point out that I’m an Evangelical, and this particular point of comparison applies to Catholics a lot more than it does to me. With that being said, I do realize we’re on a Catholic forum, and the larger point stands for the majority of anyone who’s going to see this. For the record though, I’d be interested in seeing what you’d come up with if you were going to do my people more specifically.You folks have Mary - Virgin or Otherwise.
3.) Is it all just a cynical pragmatic ploy?
That’s a good point, I do think it’s a lot easier to fall into a less desirable category when you’re a small group compared to when you’re a large group. Sometimes people will go out of their way to create a different, kinder category for you if a small group is lucky enough to become a significantly larger group than it once was.You know…because there are a lot more Hindus than say Reconstructionist pagans.
The average Christian knows very little about anything outside of Christianity. This is objectively true. We also have a tendency to think we know more about other religions than we really do, or about other types of Christianity than we really do. There is a definite trend toward ignorance alongside overconfidence.4.) The average Christian doesn’t really understand all these other ancient religions…but they do have an inkling about “paganism”?
This is all very true, and atheists, on average, put in the most work and get the best results in terms of understanding the widest variety of religions. After all, you need good reasons to reject every one of them. Christians take a good look at whatever they are practicing and typically don’t look very hard at all the things they reject.But yeah, apart from those who put in the effort to make the study of religions to be a career, the average believer doesn’t really have a firm grasp of a non-Abrahamic religion. Heck, from what the Catholics, Orthodox, et al tell me on this board and others… the average believer doesn’t really have a firm grasp on their own religion.
I’m not sure if we’re really all that familiar with paganism, I don’t think most Christians would be able to direct you to the nearest place where a pagan might go to worship, for instance. Or describe what might be done there. And if there is no formal place of worship, how would that work exactly? What would you need to buy from a Wiccan supply store in order to be a proper Wiccan? Most Christians don’t know a lot about these things, as far as I’m aware.But “paganism”? Now that’s something most Christians are familiar with, if at least in the abstract. And familiarty breeds contempt.![]()
Wouldn’t it be the same as a Jew referring to a non-Jew as a Gentile?Yes it is offensive and derogatory. Hindus in India take great offense when Roman Catholics there brand them as pagans.
I would define it as a “traditional set of religious beliefs and practices, formed over a long period as a result of the gradual evolution and lacking a uniform system of doctrines and rules”.What characteristics would make someone a “Pagan”?
I would not call Hindus as pagans. Hinduism, despite its polytheism, has a coherent system of doctrines and practices, fortified by a philosophical sophistication.Yes it is offensive and derogatory. Hindus in India take great offense when Roman Catholics there brand them as pagans.
Hindus complain that Christian missionaries come to their villages in India and try to convert them, telling them that they are pagans and must convert in order to be saved.I would not call Hindus as pagans. Hinduism, despite its polytheism, has a coherent system of doctrines and practices, fortified by a philosophical sophistication.