I am sorry if I offend. It is just my usage to word to mean non-Christians. I do realize that pagan is a religion so technically I was not correct, if you have an issue with that.
Reuben,
. No issues, brother. Just asserting the validity of Native beliefs, They are “connected” to God and were long before Columbus landed and was followed by the masses of Europeans fleeing religious persecution in Europe. There were certainly “Prophets” among the Native peoples Who taught them even as the Jewish Prophets, sent by God, the Great Spirit.
. To me it is all connected, but it is also evident that in some tribes the same human flaws appeared among the priestly class over time in certain areas, as greed and excess ritual sometimes found its way into the hearts of predatory characters, usually long after the appearance of these Prophet Figures had waned.
. The purity of the teachings was largely retained and responsible for the highly civilized behavior, well organized and stable societies imbued with virtues of courage, honesty, charity, and nobility of most tribal groups, although of course there those who tended to be more violence based and contrary.
George Catlin’s description reflects complimentarily:
“I love a people who always made me welcome to the best they had . . .
who are honest without laws, who have no jails and no poor-house . . .
who never take the name of God in vain . . .
who worship God without a Bible, and I believe that God loves them also . . .
who are free from religious animosities . . .
who have never raised a hand against me, or stolen my property, where there was no law to punish either . . .
who never fought a battle with white men except on their own ground . . .
and oh! how I love a people who don’t live for the love of money.”
[George Catlin, Last Rambles Amongst the Indians of the Rocky Mountains and the Andes, (London, 1868), pp. 354-55, as quoted in Harold McCracken, George Catlin and the Old Frontier (New York: Bonanza Books, 1959), p. 14.]
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