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How nice for you.
Yeah, I was thinkin the same thing... I'm so used to praying directly to the Father in Jesus' Name that it'd be a hassle to have to start prayin to Mary now at this point in my life.
I like having the direct connection anyway to eliminate any interference![]()
So you don't feel that "Our Father" is unwilling to hear from us unless we recruit a saint who has "pull" with him, huh?
It's amazing how some people feel that they need to humanize God in order to relate to him, even to the point of ascribing the worst in human nature to him!
. . . As for Christ's birthday, who cares? We have it in December. Ain't no thang.

Let's clear this up without delay. ALMOST EVERY Christian Church, not just the RCC, observes the Nativity on December 25 while understanding that no one knows the exact date when Jesus was born.
With respects to this topic . . .
The RCC officially maintains that Jesus wasn't born on December 25th, while conveying a message that is the exact opposite.
No, absolutely not. Those priests are reading, not editorializing. THEY ARE READING the text, quoting the proclamation made by the angel.Here's how it works, on December 25 every priest in the world from the time Christmas was first brought into the Church centuries after Christ Birth gets up in the pulpit and reads:
Luke 2:11
for today in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.
Now tell me . . . . hasn't everyone that has ever heard Luke 2:11 quoted from the pews interprets 'today' to literal mean TODAY . . . . December 25?
I would agree with this point now. Pre-internet days I do not believe the distinction was widely understood. Nor do I believe children fully comprehend the difference. If a class room of children were asked what day Jesus was born, would there be a single child able to provide the correct answer?Let's clear this up without delay. ALMOST EVERY Christian Church, not just the RCC, observes the Nativity on December 25 while understanding that no one knows the exact date when Jesus was born.
When I'm not participating within this forum, one of my other passions is studying Game Theory and Common Knowledge.No, absolutely not. Those priests are reading (Luke 2:11), not editorializing. THEY ARE READING the text, quoting the proclamation made by the angel.
And if we asked them what God looks like or how old he is, would they be able to answer like a theologian or historian? I don't think this approach (what children's imaginations suggest to them) helps us very much.I would agree with this point now. Pre-internet days I do not believe the distinction was widely understood. Nor do I believe children fully comprehend the difference. If a class room of children were asked what day Jesus was born, would there be a single child able to provide the correct answer?
It wasn't a generalization. When a pastor says those words it's because he's quoting Luke, not because he's telling the congregation to take it from him that December 25 was the day of Christ's birth. It is simply the day we observe as his natal day.To generalize Priest (and Pastors) as just reading text would be missing a greater phenomena taking place that is not lost on their superiors.
So you don't feel that "Our Father" is unwilling to hear from us unless we recruit a saint who has "pull" with him, huh?
It's amazing how some people feel that they need to humanize God in order to relate to him, even to the point of ascribing the worst in human nature to him!
If so then I will ask you why you think its impossible to the saints alive in Heaven to intercede on your behalf. Are they oblivious to life on earth? Do they not care about their fellow members of the Body of Christ?
Simple, no prophet taught intercession, Jesus didn't teach intercession, neither did the Apostles.
Do I think the saints not care, of course not. But that doesn't mean I think they have the power to do much, and if they do intercede, it's not because we pray to them. They would do it regardless I would say.
Okay, then I will ask you some follow ups.
1)Did Jesus or any of the prophets or Apostles teach us to pray for one another and/or ask others to pray for us?
A)If not, then why do you do so?
B)If so, then why does this not also apply to our fellow members of the Body
of Christ already in Heaven?
2) Also, why don't you think they have the power to do so? Are they not literally in Heaven with God? Does the book of Revelation not tell us they are in Heaven praying on our behalf?
One of the difficulties with the doctrine of saintly intercession is that saints require divine attributes in order to perform their alleged role. They must be omnipresent because if they are not they are very much limited to hearing one individual prayer at one time in one place. They must be omnipotent in order to have the power to answer the prayer. They must also be omniscient in order to know everything about the individual who is saying the prayer and their actual spiritual condition.
In life or in death no saint is a demi-god and to teach so is grave error.
Simple, no prophet taught intercession, Jesus didn't teach intercession, neither did the Apostles.
Really? When Christ healed the paralytic who was lowered through a hole in the roof, what does the gospel say about what Christ thought?