steve_bakr
Christian
- Aug 3, 2011
- 5,918
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- Catholic
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- US-Democrat
Everyone is evil to God - their ways at least. That is the whole point of needing a Savior and repentance in Christianity. If a Christian is judging you for being pagan, while (I don't know) eating easter eggs, Christmas ham, and heart shaped candies, then they will be judged for their own wrongs with equal measure. For Christians if you even tell a white lie, God's Universal Law says you have to die (goes for intangibles/spirits.)
God said not to murder, and Christ said turn the other cheek, especially if you are with sin. Perhaps those who killed people in the name of God were not worshipping the Christian God, as both Christ and God do not console murder or killing for judgment if He doesn't order it. Pagans are not and should not be so much of a threat that they should be killed. On the contrary, Christians are supposed to preach the words to everyone. I am sure you know history is filled with men and women that swear by the people's gods in the name of demagoguery and conquest. Everyone is supposed to test the fruit of the tree/body. A murderer murders, a liar lies, and an adulterer cheats - these thing meaning a perpetual sinning. You can claim to be Christian all day long, but if you unrepentantly sin and more so, don't care about those sins, then you are not a Christian. I can claim to be a Muslim, but I have never read the entire Koran, and I don't believe in prophet Muhammad. I would not be considered Muslim, so why are these spiritual invalids that murder with little remorse considered Christians? Salem, slavery, the inquisition, imperialism under "god" - no follower of Christ would do these things, IMO. I think perhaps people are offended by pagans because many of those people do the exact same things pagans do, and it convicts them in that perhaps they are just Christian for show. Some may even be worried they will be exposed for their pagan Christianity.
Religious history has its dark moments indeed, and Christians still sin, sometimes grievously.
Pagan Christianity? Well, Christian thinkers have used Pagan thought, such as that of Plato, Aristotle, and even the Muslim philosopher Averroes.
I don't really have a problem with Pagans, although I was having dinner at a Pagan's house once wherein she refused me a prayer before the meal. A lot of animosity towards Christianity, but I took it in stride.
I confess that I tried very hard to demonstrate that Christians can be kind and compassionate, but she could not see past the religious barriers between us.
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