SallyF wrote:
The Christian-Jewish propaganda does NOT say anything about celebrating the Divine Leader's birthday. We were only instructed to pretend to eat his flesh and drink his blood, for example.
I propose that Christianity has been a fraud from the very start.
Is stealing the birthdays of other supposed god-men part of the fraudulence …?
I suppose this would rest in what we choose to believe and/or celebrate. What we would adopt to be "right" and "wrong"... What we adopt to give meaning to as a belief we adhere to. And why care for any belief we might have?
Perhaps there is things in the world, that are totally wrong, false, foolish, etc.. And perhaps there is things that are right, true, and wise...
Though i find myself having a hard time, or rather giving these things a hard criticism, of establishing between the two... Why care? Though it should be valid that there is truth, and there are false beliefs... Like a belief I will go back to yesterday, is totally a false belief. (i suppose)... Or the belief that it is right to do wrong... Surely it is wrong to eat babies. (I suppose)...
Though simply put... Personally, I like Christmas, and I'm not ashamed of Jesus Christ... Being ashamed of some kind of religion, philosophy, or truth, seems to be placing shame in a place of knowledge... Even is it is foolish (i suppose)... Was it wrong for the Greeks to believe in their Myths? Is it wrong to believe in something that is foolish? Depends on what we adopt to be a definition of "wrong" and of "foolish".. Surely all kinds of wonders, and the delight of the imagination, can be considered "foolish" (i suppose)... So is it wrong to delight in the imagination? Perhaps? Perhaps not?
Though if a foolish belief leads to a wrong... Perhaps then it is wrong to do so... Maybe an example, a belief that any sexual expression is ok, leading to rape... Is that wrong? If we adopt that as "wrong" it is, (though external law isnt anything we have the option to adopt, but rather internal law)...
Honestly, in summery... Even if the original post is true and valid (which i have serious doubts about), why care? Let Jesus birthday be on Christmas, and let Christmas be a day of giving... Why object? Perhaps "
God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe" (1 Corinthians 1)