2,000 years ago what you and I think of as «slavery» was present and considered acceptable, not
just by pagans but the Jewish tradition as well.
Not exact matches
First and foremost, greeks didn't
just give up zeus on the spot, they were converted first
by the romans on pain of death and later when the romans converted to christianity, there were still
pagans, no one
just looked at their beliefs, decided they were silly and changed.
so thank you this county was built
by Pagans,... what that as true as what you
just said
At first I thought this was
just an attempt
by pagan scientists to prove evolution.
I agree with you Jeremy in a sense, but I also agree with what Chrissy says, «I believe God is calling His bride out of the Harlot system and these
pagan festivals are instigated
by the Roman Catholicism,
just as the changing of the Sabbath day was too.»
Please don't listen to these people on here they have so many different views and ideas of their own but don't listen to them they have closed their heart to God and are doing Satans work of misleading people away from the Almighty they look for men who like to have their ears tickled so don't take mine our anyone else's word for it look it up for your self history attests to the bible as true and The writings of Moses is far older than anything they have ever found thats right Moses wrote the first parts in the bible 3,500 years ago The scriptures weren't inspired
by Pagan stories
Pagan stories was inspired
by actual events
just like those in the bible because if you notice that a lot of the stories found in the bible have a lot to do about people worshipping false Gods.
Really incredible take on the STORY Jesus tells in Luke 19 about a king rejected
by his servants — interesting because Sam applies it to unbelievers when it was meant to be applied to the religious crowd who were rejecting Jesus — not the
pagans like Zacheus's crowd that Jesus had
just had a party with.
Just as God loosed the mighty
pagan Roman Empire on Jerusalem which along with the Jewish Temple was completely destroyed in the year 70 A.D., so will God loose today's powerful governments on organized religions led
by men rayping our boys.
this is to joe r, atheism is not a belief system or religion.christians call non believers atheists, thats not what i call myself, i
just think your all deluded, and
by the way i also think that all monotheistic religions are
just the same as any
pagan religion practiced before monotheism.
Christianity was
just another sect of Judaism, until Constantine hijacked it
by adding Greco - Roman mythology to it (e.g. Jesus human son of top god Jehovah replacing Hercules human son of top god Zeus), and
pagan festivals (e.g. Christmas replacing Yule, All Saints Day replacing Halloween, Valentine's Day replacing Juno's day, Easter replacing harvest festival.
Just read Already Gone
by Ken Ham or
Pagan Christianity
by Frank Viola.
I guess if you are going to believe in an all knowing, all powerful sky daddy, reading an old compilation of 60 different books from 40 different authors put together
by a group of supposedly reformed
pagans 1600 years ago would
just be putting your faith to the test, I mean a person with faith needs no proof.
Just FYI, the bible you consider the words of god, are nothing but words of mere mortals written over a long period of time then edited
by other humans to fit their agenda of money, power, and to gain
pagan followers.
A guerrilla war took place through the 1980s and 1990s in which much of the countryside was evacuated, thousands of Kurdish - populated villages were destroyed
by the government, and numerous summary executions were carried out
by both sides.However they were later driven out of Hazza
by pagans, and settled in Tamanon, which according to Abdisho was in the land of the Kurds.Tamanon lies
just north of the modern Iraq - Turkey border, while Hazza is 12 km southwest of modern Erbil.One of the earliest records of the phrase land of the Kurds is found in an Assyrian Christian document of late antiquity, describing the stories of Assyrian saints of the Middle East, such as Abdisho.When the Sasanian Marzban asked Mar Abdisho about his place of origin, he replied that according to his parents, they were originally from Hazza, a village in Assyria.The region came under Persian rule during the reign of Cyrus the Great and Darius I.
by Walter Chaw You mark off certain literary flourishes in Neil LaBute's remake of Robin Hardy's classic The Wicker Man, and then you can't help but note that beneath the
pagan matriarchy that is its villain and the hangdog cop (Nicolas Cage) that is its dullard hero, the film is
just the auteur's latest unnecessarily reductive gender deconstruction.