Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Friday, July 5, 2013

pagan origins

It's time for the next group of citizens that have been hidden away from public view - atheists - to come out of the closet.   

I've been pretty aggressively "out" lately, not just here on the blog but in my personal and professional life.  

So far, I have had no unpleasant or agitated encounters from the religionistas, but have had some brief and interesting conversations.  

At the least, many of my co-workers now realize that I am an atheist, and as I have had a reputation in my department of being very accomplished and competent, some are re-thinking their attitudes about atheists.   

Of the several people I have spoken to about atheism, all of them stated that they had never known any atheists, or at least none had met an obviously "out" atheist.  I feel sure they have some atheists in their personal orbits, but they are still "in the closet" and relatively afraid to speak out for fear of ostracization or worse.

In that vein, maybe some of the info on this great website can help you see the true light, of reason.

snip:


Pagan Origins of the Christ Myth


You already know Christmas trees and Easter eggs were originally Pagan, and you probably know the seasonal timing of the two holidays is Pagan too. Mildly interesting. Not what you'll find here. What you'll discover at POCM is that ancient cultures around the Mediterranean shared standard ideas about Gods and their powers and place in the universe—and that Christianity simply adopted those ideas and applied them to Jesus. Ancient people knew godmen did miracles. The first Christians thought Jesus was a godman, so they told stories about Jesus doing miracles. They even had Him doing the same miracles as the other godmen.

The core of Christianity—the worship of a miracle working, walking, talking godman who brings salvation—was also the core of other ancient religions that began at least a thousand years before Jesus.

Heaven, hell, prophecy, daemon possession, sacrifice, initiation by baptism, communion with God through a holy meal, the Holy Spirit, monotheism, immortality of the soul, and many other "Christian" ideas all belonged to earlier, older Pagan faiths. They were simply part of ancient Mediterranean culture. Along with miracle working sons of God, born of a mortal woman, they were common elements of pre-Christian Pagan religion. Mithras had 'em. So did Dionysus, Attis, Osiris, and Orpheus. And more.

And they had them generations—centuries— before Jesus was a twinkle in Saint Paul's eye.

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