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Actually, you made an assertion. . .which was a strawman.
That would be:I asked you: According to you, would it be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by the word, "Halloween"? Yes or No?
You: <NO ANSWER>
I asked you: According to you, would it be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to 31 October by the word, "Halloween"? Yes or No?
You: <NO ANSWER>
What "assertion" are you asserting I made?
You play loose with grammar. . .The word, "Halloween"? Did I say that the word, "Halloween," came from Satan? No. I did not.
So, according to you, it would be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by this word, "Halloween"?
So, regarding what I wrote that you already admitted is a question, you have now changed your story, and told me that, instead of being a question, it is an assertion.That would be:
You play loose with grammar. . .
The question:
"So, according to you, it would be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by this word, "Halloween"?
The answer:
Strawman.
That would be:I asked you: According to you, would it be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by the word, "Halloween"? Yes or No?
You: <NO ANSWER>
I asked you: According to you, would it be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to 31 October by the word, "Halloween"? Yes or No?
You: <NO ANSWER>
What "assertion" are you asserting I made?
You play loose with grammar. . .The word, "Halloween"? Did I say that the word, "Halloween," came from Satan? No. I did not.
So, according to you, it would be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by this word, "Halloween"?
Non-responsive. . .So, regarding what I wrote that you already admitted is a question, you have now changed your story, and told me that, instead of being a question, it is an assertion.
Here is you admitting that the question I asked you is a question, and beneath that, you are lying by telling me you have answered it:
And, since you play dumb about grammar, I had re-worded this question for you (even though you already admitted that it is a question) thus, in post #100:
According to you, would it be wrong—incorrect—to not refer to any day by the word, "Halloween"? Yes or No?
And, so far, you've not answered it. Why is that?
See, even you know you've got nothing.Non-responsive. . .
Actually, you made an assertion. . .which was a strawman.
an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument.
Just like what you had written in your previous post, what you wrote, here, is also not even a sentence. So, your hypocrisy is glaring in saying that I "play loose with grammar".As in your non-response to my post.
Face it: Everyone pretends the Holy Spirit is a thing, calling the Third Person of the Trinity "it" - even in churches. Although the Bible does not refer to the Holy Spirit as "He" anywhere, a born person is never called "it" like other animal species, even if the sex is unknown. The Holy Spirit is a PERSON of God.
On the other hand, the Bible says "the Holy Spirit" everywhere. Yes, people say "the baby" and "that kid," etc. But putting "the" in front of "Holy Spirit" implies there is no life in "it."
What do you think?
I'm surprised to hear this. In every church that I've belonged to, the HS has been referred to as "He" or "Him." And I assume that's because this is how he is referred to in the New Testament. See John 14:26, for instance.
Still non-responsive to the post (#105).Just like what you had written in your previous post, what you wrote, here, is also
not even a sentence. So, your hypocrisy is glaring in saying that I "play loose with grammar".
Malay. The word is "ia" or "dia" but they mean the same thing which is a third person singular gender-nutral pronoun. This is the same with words like daughter or son, there is no word to distinguish gender and it's just child.
I think English is going to lean this way too as gender neutral pronouns become more of a demand. It will start in social media where people will take offence to gender pronouns and get picked up in informal and formal writting and to news broadcasts for fear of offending. ect.. until everyone drops he/she.
There was a similar problem with "thou" which is the second person singular in English where using it became out of fashion and the plural "ye" or "you" wasn't as direct and considered more respectful. It was used when addressing a stranger and became popular amoung the more affluent, then everyone just starting using it.
I predict he/she will be replaced in a similar way with "they" and using he/she will start to feel very awkward and too formal.
Face it: Everyone pretends the Holy Spirit is a thing, calling the Third Person of the Trinity "it" - even in churches. Although the Bible does not refer to the Holy Spirit as "He" anywhere, a born person is never called "it" like other animal species, even if the sex is unknown. The Holy Spirit is a PERSON of God.
On the other hand, the Bible says "the Holy Spirit" everywhere. Yes, people say "the baby" and "that kid," etc. But putting "the" in front of "Holy Spirit" implies there is no life in "it."
What do you think?
Where do you find any of that mumbo jumbo in the Bible? It's not in the Bible, so it has nothing to do with Christianity.
What do you mean by "honoring the Saints"? And, whatever it is you mean by that, where does the Bible enjoin Christians to set a particular day, such as 1 November, for "honoring the Saints"?It’s a day for honoring the Saints. Many of them are mentioned in the Bible.
A "Christian" observance of what?
Where do you find any of that mumbo jumbo in the Bible? It's not in the Bible, so it has nothing to do with Christianity.
There's nothing wrong with dressing up like devils and devil-worshipers and pretending to threaten mischief against those who do not give you something you demand they give you gratis?
No; it is like calling people "superstitious rubes" for going on dates on February 14 when they are motivated to do so by the fact that the superstitious rubes call February 14 "the Feast Day of St. Valentine".
The Feast of All Saints is a day set aside
on the Western Christian Calendar in which we honor the whole host of the saints who have come before us.
Memorials of the deaths of saints (especially martyrs) has been Christian practice since the earliest years of the Christian Church. Such saints' days remembered the day of their death because it was perceived as a kind of "birthday in heaven"; because even in death there is life for those who are in Christ Jesus. As the Lord Himself said in John 11:25-26.
Prior to the 9th century the usual time set aside
In the 9th century the Pope moved the celebration of All Saints to a fixed date, November 1st, to commemorate what had become the popular practice in Rome already (going back a century or so earlier). And since then the Western Church has continued to observe All Saints on November 1st, both Catholic and Protestant.
On the Lutheran Calendar specifically, October 31st has special significance as Reformation Day, as such Reformation Day tends to take precedence in Lutheran practice over Halloween, but we do still observe All Saints Day.
Then I'm sure you'd be willing to show where "if it's not in the Bible it has nothing to do with Christianity" is found in the Bible itself.
Are you scared of four year old children dressed as pirates and princesses bullying candy from you?
Just wait until you learn that some people celebrate wedding anniversaries and birthdays.