I suppose I should start by saying that I do not expect you to agree. I only hope that you can understand why intelligent and rational people could adopt such a stand. Again, it is always a question of "who's right, if anybody". I've given up convincing. I can only attempt to explain.
aliantha wrote:
rusmeister wrote:The article you post has inaccuracies and false assumptions (no doubt written by a pagan editor). I am ready to accept what a pagan has to say about pagan beliefs as authoritative. I am not prepared to accept what they have to say about Christian beliefs.
Well, the victor always gets to write history.

It kind of stands to reason that pagan writers would have a different take on what happened. And it also makes sense to me that the Church would demonize the Green Man (to use another, non-Slavic example) by calling him Satan, and call the tenets of an earlier religion sinful superstitions -- how else do you get people to stop practicing the old ways? Other than on the point of a sword, that is (which, btw, happened as well, and I daresay it has happened to adherents of many religions throughout time; Christianity doesn't have a lock on martyrdom).
(Hmm, I thought Eostre was a Germanic goddess. I guess you can extrapolate that to English tradition eventually...)
Here the salient point is that the only place in Christendom where a pagan name had any influence on the naming of the holiday was in ancient England.
Like I said, in Orthodoxy the holiday is specifically NOT called Easter, even in English. It is called "Pascha". Orthodox Christians in the English-speaking world use the term largely as a convention to communicate with non-Orthodox.
It's very commonly raised as an argument, but when examined, turns out to be false.
It would also make sense to call practices sinful superstitions if that is what they actually were.
The 'point of sword' thought is addressed below.
aliantha wrote:
rusmeister wrote:Associations of pagan gods with christian saints ; false, false, false. There I'll go so far as to say that it is a lie. The nature of the relationship between saint and believer is fundamentally different from pagan god and believer. The saints are merely people that have gone over before us, and are part of the same family we are - and so are brothers and sisters - not gods. They have no special powers that are not given to them by God according to Christian beliefs. In our prayers, we ask them to pray for us - to ask God to do things for us, not for them to do magic for us.
From my perspective, miracles *are* magic.
The whole thing with pagan god worship/saint intercession happened in other countries, too, one example being Ireland's St. Brigid, who was worshipped much the same way as the pagan goddess of the same name. The Roman church eventually made the St. Brigid cult extinguish the eternal flame at the monastery bearing her name. Altho I believe it's been relit since then.
On saints - the idea that saints simply copied/replaced pagan gods, again, is false. The theology, in Orthodoxy at least, is a logical development of what Christian teaching on the nature of life and death is. For example, a central Orthodox teaching is that all are alive in God. Christ said, referring to a statement of God (the Father)'s that He is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob", that He is the God of the living, not of the dead. Therefore, after death, there is a state of life (that it is possible to 'die' from - referred to as 'the second death', but this is only at the end of time). IOW, they are not finally dead, they are merely passed over to the other side (The words of 'Miracle Max' from 'The Princess Bride' come to mind: "He's not really dead - he's only 'mostly' dead' - and mostly dead is somewhat alive..."

). In short, we can talk to the saints and ask them to pray for us, not because they are demigods (as the pagan understanding you seem to describe views it), but because they are alive in God. The saints (and we can't even know who is not a saint in God's eyes - we can only know who it has been given to the Church to declare a saint - thus there could be pagan saints - but only God would know that. But for those that we DO know to be saints, we can talk to them (it's called 'prayer', and the understanding here differs radically from the Protestant understanding of prayer as 'worship' - to us, it's reverent speech - talking). The saints are those righteous people who have found special favor in God's eyes, and because "the prayers of a righteous man availeth much" we can ask them to pray for us just like we can ask our friends and family to pray for us - for their sakes God may move the things that are outside of human free will (when it is truly to our eternal benefit) to work in our favor (you might say that the saints have 'more clout' - they lived lives of repentance and deed that we usually/mostly fail to live up to). And thus miracles performed by saints. But it is not the power of the saint, but the power of God. And unlike magic, it is not manipulation. For those who have read the Chronicles of Narnia, there is a point in the beginning of "The Silver Chair" where Jill says to Eustace, "Shouldn't we draw a magic circle or something?" and Eustace replies - "No - HE would think that was just rot, like we were trying to force him to do something." And that's what magic in the human understanding is - an imposition of our will; a forcing of events. The Christian submits (often struggles to submit) his will to God's ("Let Thy will be done" as opposed to "Let my will be done").
aliantha wrote:
Speaking of reading lists

, I haven't read the book that this
blog mentions, but I think the entry does a nice job of explaining what makes these dialogues between Christians and non-Christians so difficult.
Which isn't to say that books like "Beyond the Burning Times" aren't important, they are, but both sides must acknowledge the large hurdles to overcome before we reach something that resembles mutual respect and trust. We need to get to a point where Pagans don't feel that efforts at dialogue from missional Christians aren't "an attempt at domination", and Christians don't think Pagans are asking them to "give up the centrality of Christ". Monotheism and polytheism have had throughout history at best an uneasy truce, and at worst, attempts to eradicate the other. It may take decades of "baby steps" before we reach a point of mutual understanding and a general sense of improved relations.
It seems like the ultimate goal is to reach "improved relations" as if it were a matter of secular politics. On a human and political level there are certainly points where that is the case. However, the Christian goal is beyond this life - this life is a necessary stage of our existence - and a critical one - we can 'blow' everything, we can, in a sense, save or damn or souls - although the Christian would add that we can only do what is required of us and that it is Christ that saves us - but the damnation we do to ourselves, so 'God damn this-or-that-person' is a theological fallacy.
Since this life is not the be-all and end-all of existence, the Christian's goal in it is to do what may be done to make first of all himself pleasing to God, and then to create an environment that is pleasing to God. FWIW, a great many Christians skip the first part and jump right to the second part - making it a vain exercise. But still, where possible, we should strive to make laws, government, in short, society, one that God can bless. When it's not possible we go into the catacombs. But in a spiritual sense, it is war, and the real enemy is Satan - and we are potential victims to be claimed by him (so people are not really our enemies in that sense and the war is not to be interpreted as a corporeal war).
But that's not what I really wanted to write. What I wanted to say is that from that perspective, pluralism - which attempts to get diverse and opposing beliefs to live together in peace - is ultimately impossible for the Christian, because the upshot of pluralism is that what you believe doesn't matter; it should not affect your politics or how you live your life in the world in general - and for a Christian this negates their faith as true (and this is the extreme that dominates in our world today - while calling itself a golden mean and identifying any other stance as 'extreme').
The other extreme that sometimes happens in history - forced or imposed conversion, is also in conflict with the Christian faith - it may be politically expedient, but it is not true faith unless it is willingly accepted. Thus, the 'Christianized' nations were/are really only Christian to the extent that the faith is voluntarily accepted and practiced. Whenever it is forced, it is already political, and not Christianity.
But there is a point between these two extremes - and that is a determination of what truths shall be used to establish and implement a just society - in other words, to determine what is good. As Chesterton says - and it is such a pity you guys won't read him - we would agree about the evil - about what is wrong - it is the question of what is good over which we would tear each others' eyes out. To paraphrase - we all (used to) agree that prostitution is bad - we do not agree that purity is good. It is here that we must struggle and ought not to compromise - one side or the other will win - but then, only for a while. It is God who will really save us (the ideas eviscerated from the film "Prince Caspian" - but they're in the book all right), but we are to do what we can while we are here.
You cannot take 'baby steps' away from truth and towards falsehood. That is regress, not progress.
People who still think in terms of decades don't know much about Christian history or theology - or likely any of the major world religions in-depth. The smallest unit in Orthodoxy could be said to be "the century".
Again, either monotheism or polytheism is true (for people who have progressed that far). They can't be both true. One excludes the other. You can't build a society that includes the principles of both (except by saying that none of it is really true or really matters - or that that is 'your path to the divine', which is the same thing.
Hopefully the POV makes a little more sense now, even if you disagree. At least it could be acknowledged that it's not irrational, however wrong you think it is.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton