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What's a "saint"?The cross of St George ...
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What's a "saint"?The cross of St George ...
Saint George, according to legend, was a Roman soldier of Syrian origin and officer in the Guard of Roman emperor Diocletian, who ordered his death for failing to recant his Christian faith. As a Christian martyr, he later became one of the most venerated saints in Christianity and in particular the Crusades.
Apart from passing churches and cathedrals you could go a whole year in the UK and never see a thing to do with religion.
Come and see for yourself.Do you still want to stick to this:
Is that invitation and paragraph a YES or a NO?Come and see for yourself.
In the spring and throughout the summer all the pretty churches are used for weddings and it's lovely, bells are ringing and it's picture postcard perfect with hardly a professing Christian in sight, people pay lip service to religion but no one really believes it.
A saint is a person the church holds up as someone who did something special (in their eyes) but we all know about Mother Teresa who was a truly wicked misguided woman.What's a "saint"?
Then I submit you have a serious problem with denial.YES.
Okay.A saint is a person the church holds up as someone who did something special (in their eyes) but we all know about Mother Teresa who was a truly wicked misguided woman.
Why would Christians want to bow down to the symbol that caused so much pain to their God? tens of thousand of people were crucified so it was nothing unusual in Roman times. The swastika was a symbol of well being before the Nazi's took it and turned it into a symbol of hate and death.But at least they know a cross when they see one.
Hi.
I used to visit these forums frequently years ago. I was a Christian back then, no religious beliefs now. I see that AV is still doing his [insert] challenge, (I think the first one was the "My Apple Challenge"), I see Loudmouth and Wiccan Child are still here.
To the old-school heads: aren't you bored yet? It's pretty likely that after a certain amount of time, you're probably not going to change your minds. What keeps you coming back to Crevo?
Anyway...it was nice to see some old names are still around.
As the song says, I'll exchange it some day for a crown.Why would Christians want to bow down to the symbol that caused so much pain to their God?
Why would Christians want to bow down to the symbol that caused so much pain to their God? tens of thousand of people were crucified so it was nothing unusual in Roman times.