in

Carnaval Brasil 2023….

What do you think?

35 Points
Upvote Downvote
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

49 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
starly
starly
1 year ago

Why is February the month of carnivals worldwide? Is there any occult satanic reason?

Jbizzle
Jbizzle
1 year ago
Reply to  starly

It’s a mockery leading up to the holiest day of the year for Christians/Jews (Passover/Christ’s Death and Resurrection).

John Smith
John Smith
1 year ago
Reply to  Jbizzle

Correct- every single thing these Luciferians do is meant to be an affront to Yeshua or YHWY Himself. Everything from mock holy days to the “3 am witching our” (meant to mock the 3 pm time Christ died on the cross). They even rape, torture & kill children more than any other age group- why? Because Jesus specifically said that anyone who harms one of these little children would be better off if they “tied a millstone around their neck & jumped into the sea.” So, they harm children just to insult, mock, and (pardon my French) piss off our Lord. Lara Logan, truth & independent reporter confirmed this during a confidential interview w/an ex-member of the Illuminati.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  Jbizzle

Historically, Carnival was the precise opposite of a mockery of Easter. It was actually part of the pre-Lenten preparations for Easter. Had it been intended as mockery of Easter, it would have occurred during Lent, not before.

Fleurdamour
Fleurdamour
1 year ago
Reply to  starly

It is supposed to be about people getting stuff out of their system before the penitence of Lent.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  starly

Carnival comes from medieval Latin, meaning “take away meat,” or even (by a certain popular etymology) “farewell to the flesh”; historically, carnival was the last day a Christian was permitted to eat meat in the period leading up to Easter, and this is the reason for its falling in February. It was a means for the Christian to prepare himself for the long fast of Lent, which, in even a fairly recent past, was taken very seriously indeed. The festive air of Carnival was thus originally counterbalanced with the deeply penitent quality of Lent; modernity, with its characteristic crypto-paganism, has exalted the first and discarded the second.

There is thus nothing pagan about the festival itself. It was thoroughly corrupted only when the power of Christianity began to wane, and the results are evident for all the world to see in demonic travesties like that above.

We should ready ourselves. This is only a prelude to the full assault on Easter itself which is certainly coming — if not this year, then in the not too distant future.

checkers
checkers
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

Easter is historically a pagan holiday during which Baal and Astheroth or Ishtar are worshipped. It was originally and still is a pagan fertility festival. The Catholic Church then came along and corrupted Christianity by deceiving Christians into participating in the one world religion of worshipping demons. Don’t let your babies participate in Satanic rituals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zG1RDFcqDPw

Anon
Anon
1 year ago
Reply to  checkers

Easter in itself isn’t, Easter is about Jesus’s resurrection (yes I’m familiar with theories about the name, I’m talking about the actual holiday itself). Easter doesn’t have to include things like eggs and the easter bunny. The holiday itself is to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus which is absolutely something that should be celebrated

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  checkers

If we set aside the name “Easter” itself, which is used only in a small number of Anglo-Saxon countries, there is no historical basis whatsoever to your claims, Checkers. In Latin, the language of the Catholic Church, the word for the Christian celebration of the Resurrection is “Pascha”; there is no etymological equivalent of our “Easter” in either Latin or Italian, so your claim regarding the Catholic introduction of a pagan holiday would need to be based on something other than the word “Easter.”

So far as the video you’ve posted, it seems to me that Dr. Schnoebelen is drawing too many conclusions based on the King James translation of the Bible. The problems he notes are easily enough resolved by looking at the original Greek. As he himself points out, the original of Acts 2:4, which the King James translates as “Easter,” is in point of fact Pascha in the Greek, the word universally and exclusively used for the Jewish Passover. There is no indication in the original text that the word is referring to any other holiday, and certainly not to a non-Jewish holiday; if St. Luke had meant to speak of a pagan festival, why in the world would he not have used a different word?

As for the problem that Dr. Schnoebelen notes in the chronology in Acts 12:3-5 — namely, that St. Peter is arrested during the days of unleavened bread and was not to be released until “after Passover,” but the days of unleavened bread follow Passover — this is very easily resolved: St. Luke means by “Pascha” to indicate the entire seven days. This is not unbiblical: see Ezekiel 45:21.

Michele
Michele
1 year ago

Revelation 13:15 And he had power to give life unto the image of the beast, that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause that as many as would not worship the image of the beast should be killed.

stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago

They know what they are doing.

Default_girl_in_carnival_1_3a6c844d-7509-420a-b99e-33c0837ac46f_1.jpg
A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

If you refer to the people who sexualized this little girl (or boy..?) and burdened her with implants, I agree.
Is that who you refer to, Steven? Or is it the little girl, herself?

Yxxy
Yxxy
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

This is a trash AI art, not a photo

stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  Yxxy

AYYYY. About time someone caught on. While I agree the image is too provocative, you can’t deny that the quality of the photo/render itself is incredible. The sharpness. The colors. The shallow depth of field. The design and details in her outfit. Her expression. The light and shadow on her face. *chef’s kiss*

Default_very_scary_holding_ball_of_light_The_Legendary_Mysterious_Jes_1_e4ba57ad-569c-4c82-b39b-f7c8da8ed628_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

2

Default_A_majestic_jesus_stunning_interpretive_visual_artgerm_illumi_0_cc8c29e0-ddc9-43e5-9920-4b5d8d654435_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

3

Default_Jesus_wearing_Astronaut_suite_and_astronaut_helmet_long_beard_3_cc3888b3-caf6-4473-bd48-7c30b416bd0e_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

4

RPG_40_Jesus_as_a_30_year_old_israeli_man_circa_30_AD_long_dark_hai_0.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

5

Deliberate_11_Jesus_Christ_as_a_Jedi_holding_a_green_lightsaber_in_the_sty_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

6

DreamShaper_32_Jesus_with_a_sheep_in_his_arms_2.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

7

RPG_40_glamour_of_a_Joyful_Jesus_the_Cyberpunk_jesus_surrounded_by_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

8

RPG_40_A_renaissance_portrait_jesus_painting_epic_no_clothes_epic_h_2.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

9

Deliberate_11_jesus_christ_with_a_staff_in_one_hand_in_a_green_pasture_in_2.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

10

DreamShaper_32_comic_book_panel_of_a_jesus_at_the_beach_in_a_white_loin_clo_2.jpg
Yxxy
Yxxy
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

These are all trash as well, you should make something better than physically disables Jesus images, the anatomy on these are insulting and I’m not even religious

Yxxy
Yxxy
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

I do deny it, since nothing on this image makes sense, from the shape of iris to the nonsensical shadows, unintelligible shapes on that decoration, face of a 3 years old with b***s etc. There are no details just incoherent nonsense and you don’t have to be an artist to see it.

stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  Yxxy

Lol, did an AI snatch your girlfriend from you? Cope. This technology has come an incredible distance in just the span of 6 months. Animated video and 3D maneuverable scenes are right around the corner.

Default_A_vibrant_and_dreamlike_scene_of_a_deep_sea_abyss_filled_with_0_bb73ce6a-b5b9-4d7d-9fa4-b333036c19c9_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

12

Default_electric_lightnings_and_storm_over_a_ancient_robotic_maya_ste_2_b609cbc5-d4f4-4bbf-a3ed-d7ef7555c40b_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

13

Default_Epic_Cinematic_and_award_winning_extremely_realistic_and_deta_0_d4d96050-3f82-4bb1-81d4-9e89eab13603_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

14

Default_A_captivating_oil_painting_of_a_cat_set_against_an_intricate_0_10b8a642-e789-4441-b461-76fa0f91f379_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

15

Default_Stunning_rendition_whimsical_glitter_texture_silk_magic_steam_3_186f0183-d238-48b8-8491-451741729ae0_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

16

Default_A_steampunk_anime_retro_black_yellow_car_in_full_body_summer_2_be41509c-05b2-4318-b333-4b67f345c99c_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

17

z27lgttst8ha1.png
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

18

Default_Psychedelic_machinery_1_ac8af602-b1dd-40f6-9c3c-4dd762e9700c_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

19

Default_A_Multidimensional_Mechatronic_hiphop_DANcer_from_the_7th_Den_1_570eeb7c-be09-45ce-a1e8-65f7766f4d5b_1.jpg
stevencasteel
stevencasteel
1 year ago
Reply to  stevencasteel

20

wtpwuodykjja1.png
Alexd
Alexd
1 year ago

Carnival comes from the words meat & Baal – it is a pagan celebration and was mixed with the Apokreo ( greek – meaning no meat ) or Lent of christians to further confuse and make every christian celebration a pagan one.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  Alexd

But up until recent centuries, it wasn’t ever mixed in with Lent. It has always occurred directly before Lent, and it’s entire purpose was actually to prepare the way for Lent.

There is an honorable tendency nowadays to cut off the recent grafting of paganism onto our historic Christian ways, but, as untried surgeons, we often cut too deep, and take the organ with the cancer. Better than one thousand years, Europe lived beneath Christian faith and Christian governance. Let us not betray our heritage.

A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

What did the original Carnaval look like, JBL, that made it a revelry of righteousness? I would be interested in hearing of a holy version of this festival, because I can’t really fathom one.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  A E

It wasn’t a holy day; it was, precisely, a festival (feast day). Prior at least to Protestantism, Christianity has always made room for festivals and feasts, because it has always elevated the entire array of authentic human life, and has never sought to make of every human being a monk or a priest. Are feasts to be prohibited? The entire week following Easter was a festival in Christendom; was this, too, a “revelry of righteousness” – or was it a meet expression of joy at the Resurrection of our Savior?

During the original Carnival, there was a great deal of merry-making and much eating of meat for a period of several days, along with, I do not doubt, a quantity of silliness, folly, and drinking, and some inevitable abuses. Are light-heartedness and cheer to be prohibited to human beings? These few days preceded almost two months of somber reflection and a fasting routine that puts our present-day “diets” to shame. Where, precisely, was the center of gravity located?

In all honesty, A E, I fail to see anything here detrimental to human life or prejudicial to its sanctity. Far more ruinous to man is a puritan view of human nature which rigidly prohibits such expressions, rather than attempting to bound them within appropriate limits and to appropriately locate them in a clear hierarchy of human goods.

A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

You attribute to me much I never said nor suggested, I have no problem whatsoever with people celebrating life whenever and for whatever reason they wish to and think that is exactly the way we were intended to live, with times for genuine gratitude and celebration.

I am more familiar with Mardi Gras in New Orleans, which is a similar fete.
But my understanding is that these are Spring Equinox fertility festivals and that the modern pagan symbolism is by no means off the mark for the original celebrations. That is why I find it odd to be a church-sanctioned revelry, although I am aware Catholicism absorbed Paganism, in a manner of speaking. Why did they not simply allow the people to enjoy their feast as they always had?

I believe there are likely millions whom could testify against your attributions of church benevolence towards “the entire array of human life” as well as to your idea that they did not enforce a great deal of behavioral rigidity on many fronts, but I’ll leave that to those more personally familiar.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  A E

Sincere apologies for the misattributions, A E. It does indeed seem I’ve misunderstood your position, which was certainly not my intent. Rather than make the same mistake twice, let me ask a few questions, if I may.

Am I to take it that you find nothing wrong with pagan festivities, be they of the ancient or the modern variety? What (if any) limits do you think should be put on festivities?

So far as my claims about Christianity and its relation to the expressions of human life, you left out the key word: Christianity nourishes the entire array of authentic human life. It does this precisely by cutting off those parts of human life which are deadened or corrupted by the human tendency toward selfishness, degradation and wickedness. There is thus nothing odd whatsoever in Christianity’s rightful appropriation of the old pagan festivals, precisely because it did not simply absorb them, but rather transformed and fulfilled them. The old pagan festivals could not be celebrated as they always had been, because they were involved in idolatry and the worship of demons – beings, that is to say, bent on the ruin of mankind and, through mankind, Creation. Christianity had to eliminate the rot, that the living tissue might thrive.

Such, at least, is the Christian claim. Now, if you hold that this view is wrong-headed somehow, or that Christianity actually did (or does) violence to some essential part of our human nature, I would be interested to hear your thoughts.

A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

My beliefs as concerns others are pretty straightforward and simple: love everyone, take care of the poor and the widowed and lead a life by example which shows others you’re different and models for them as much as is possible, the love of the Father and grace of the Son.

I don’t believe anyone was ever truly converted out of pressure, fear or coercion. I also don’t believe it is my right nor anywhere mandated to me by my Father to impose my beliefs onto anyone else – their walk is between them and God. All I can do is point the way as best I can.

I don’t think it right for any church to impose itself onto unbelievers, that is politics and not the place of the church. If a church wants to have certain rules for those who decide voluntarily to adhere, so be it, that is an accord.

Of course I do not approve of Paganism or Pagan festivals, but again, it is not for me to facilitate, crush nor change by force or manipulation the aspects of anyone else’s beliefs. You say the church changed these festivals to teach the Christian stories instead, but by following Pagan times and seasons and for the bulk of their symbolism to remain the same or similar…? How did the church fulfill Pagan beliefs via this transformation? Were the Pagans unaware of these subtleties or were then unable to continue their worship as before, only under an approved guise? How did this set them free in any way? If the Church was teaching and training the people as Yeshua did, it shouldn’t seem necessary – by all accounts he drew massive crowds wherever he went, even when he craved a bit of peace for himself.

To answer your last question, the Church imposed itself in violent ways against human beings also endowed by their Creator with free will, just as themselves, and in doing so made themselves idols. They set themselves as above the will of the Creator concerning His own creation, and still continue to do so in many manifestations, to include stealing and hoarding their histories and doling out in censored bites what they deem it proper for people to know.

It is my opinion they would have done far better to teach and train and allow the Father to change people’s hearts so they might be transformed from within rather than cutting them off from undesirable behaviors through force, yet which, within, the people still craved. Through manipulation (witchcraft, ironically) and oppression, the church taught many to love their Paganism all the more ferociously.

Last edited 1 year ago by lgageharleya
A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

Not sure why my response to you has been marked as spam, awaiting approval.
I did manage to make a copy just now, though, so if it isn’t approved I will try to find another way to communicate it to you.

Last edited 1 year ago by lgageharleya
A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

Let’s try this again, since my comment is not being approved.

My beliefs as concerns others are pretty straightforward and simple: love everyone, give to the poor, the orphaned and the widowed and lead a life by example which shows others you’re different and models for them as much as is possible, the love of the Father and grace of the Son.

I don’t believe anyone was ever truly converted out of pressure, fear or coercion. I also don’t believe it is my right nor anywhere mandated to me by my Father to impose my beliefs onto anyone else – their walk is between them and God. All I can do is point the way as best I can.

I don’t think it right for any church to impose itself onto unbelievers, that is politics and not the place of the church. If a church wants to have certain rules for those who decide voluntarily to adhere, so be it, that is an accord.

Of course I do not approve of Paganism or Pagan festivals, but again, it is not for me to facilitate, crush nor change by force or manipulation the aspects of anyone else’s beliefs. You say the church changed these festivals to teach the Christian stories instead, but by following Pagan times and seasons and for the bulk of their symbolism to remain the same or similar…? How did the church fulfill Pagan beliefs via this transformation? Were the Pagans unaware of these subtleties, or were they unhindered to continue their worship as before, only under an approved guise? How did this set them free in any way? If the Church was teaching and training the people as Yeshua did, it shouldn’t seem necessary – by all accounts he drew massive crowds wherever he went, even when he craved a bit of peace for himself.

To answer your last question, the Church imposed itself in violent ways against human beings also endowed by their Creator with free will, just as themselves, and in doing so made themselves idols. They set themselves as above the will of the Creator concerning His own creation, and still continue to do so in many manifestations, to include stealing and hoarding their histories and doling out in altered and censored bites what they deem it proper for people to know.

It is my opinion they would have done far better to teach and train and allow the Father to change people’s hearts so they might be transformed from within rather than cutting them off from undesirable behaviors through force, yet which, within, the people still craved. Through manipulation (witchcraft, ironically) and oppression, the church taught many to love their Paganism all the more ferociously.

A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  A E

None of this is even to mention the human trafficking and related horrors the Church is involved in to this day. It’s mentioned by many, many survivors of SRA (with many names named) as a major player in that system.

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  A E

I very much appreciate the reply, A E. And thanks for persevering, despite the technological mishap.

I think I can agree with most of what you write in your first three paragraphs, so let me go straight to the fourth. It begins:

“Of course I do not approve of Paganism or Pagan festivals, but again, it is not for me to facilitate, crush nor change by force or manipulation the aspects of anyone else’s beliefs.”

I want to pause on this for a moment. In the first place, in ancient times, the question was never about regulating beliefs. The idea of forcing another human being to believe anything, not to speak of stymieing their free will, has always been entirely alien to the original Christian teachings. But it stands to reason that the outward expression of wrong beliefs, whether in act or in public teaching, can in some cases cause damage to other individuals than the miscreant, and this is where the real question emerges: how, and when, is it right to regulate or alter these expressions?

Now, I suspect that you cannot help but agree that some amount of intervention, even at the level of law, is necessary here. I doubt you would say, for instance, that it is wrong to establish laws prohibiting human sacrifice, and, unless you correct my course, I will proceed on the premise that you agree that this kind of law is not only acceptable, but even obligatory in a Christian society.

Human sacrifice, of course, is a very extreme and uncontroversial case. But if we allow the justice of even a single intervention, the question immediately becomes where the line should be drawn. And here, we discover a great crowd of problems, to whose gravity and difficulty, it seems to me, your position does not do justice, as: Are Christian societies not obliged to protect the innocent that live within them? What of the innocent children, who might be exposed to destructive notions and practices in pagan households or communities, opening the way to an increase in socially deleterious activity over the course of generations and thus affecting the whole of the commonwealth? Or what if a Christian society, in which such things like human sacrifice are absolutely prohibited, comes into immediate contact with a pagan society, wherein such practices are still rife (as happened, for instance, when the Spanish touched ground in South America)? Is it better to attempt to approach such peoples peacably and to convert them by example over time, even while they are slaying the innocent day by day? Or still again, should charismatic liars be permitted to publicly teach falsehoods that will confuse the minds and damage the souls of simple-minded folk?

I do not pretend to have a neat and tidy answer to these questions, but I do think that it is not always easy to separate intolerable crimes (e.g. human sacrifice) from tolerable errors (e.g. this or that private theological error). One might surely wonder if the festivities we are discussing do not fall into the latter category. After all, what harm does it really do, if certain individuals go about celebrating some pagan festival in a particularly ribald or excessive way? As long as they don’t hurt anyone, or damage any property, should they not be allowed to do as they please, and take the responsibility for any self-harm on their own shoulders?

These are, I allow, entirely valid questions. But I would submit that the consequences of too great a libertarian permissiveness are becoming terribly evident in our own day, when the examples of (to name but a few) grotesque gay pride celebrations or the rampant sexuality and violence of our internet spaces and televisions and films makes for a certain social inescapable atmosphere which our children breathe in from infancy, despite the best efforts of their parents to shield them from it. It becomes clearer, year by year, why the earliest Christian lawgivers thought it best to outright prohibit pagan worship: for this worship is not an isolated evil, but inevitably becomes a common disease. All of this not even to speak of the plight of a Christian lawgiver or statesman in a secular government, who is impossibly expected to live in his private capacity as though the Gospel were true, and to act in his public capacity as though it were but one opinion among many!

Of course, it is essential to note that Christianity did not conquer the world via laws, nor through the violent imposition of its ways, but rather through the example of individual Christians, and their bearing witness to the Truth; this is, indeed, the proper means of transmitting the faith. To this extent, A E, we altogether agree. I also agree with you that, wherever men have relied on the sword rather than the Gospel to establish Christianity, they have done impious violence, not only against their fellow man, but against the very faith they claimed to be bearing into the world. Nonetheless, I think that the problems I have noted are in no way clear-cut, nor is the solution to them as simple as letting each to his own.

To much more briefly answer several of your other (very searching) questions:

“How did the church fulfill Pagan beliefs via this transformation?”

By bringing to fruition that in them which was right and good, and by eliminating that which was false and corrupting.

“Were the Pagans unaware of these subtleties, or were they unhindered to continue their worship as before, only under an approved guise?”

The pagans were indeed unaware of certain elements of this problem — not because they were fools or backwards (quite the contrary), but because they were human beings, limited by the native limitations of our human condition. The revelation of God, by God, in the life and teaching of Jesus Christ gives to human beings wisdom and perspective that it can not gain on its own. Once that revelation has been accepted by a society, nothing can remain the same; but that is not to say that everything must vanish and be replaced. Thus, the pagans could not worship as they once had, but that which was good in their worship was preserved and exalted in the spirit of Christ.

“How did this set them free in any way?”

By bringing the whole of society into greater correspondence with the Truth, and producing an upward spiral towards sanctification from generation to generation. Freedom is in Christ and Christ alone.

A E
A E
1 year ago
Reply to  JBL

It strikes me that either you have an idealized view of the Church of Rome or I have wrong history. Because everything I’ve ever read speaks to the Church torturing and murdering people for their wrong beliefs. I agree it stands counter to original teachings, from Yeshua and his disciples, but did the Church at any time adhere to these teachings? Seems that at every turn they went against what was handed down in Scriptures and created their own Pharisaical religion then enforced it via the sword (and worse).

I agree that natural and carnal men need laws to externally restrict behaviors which may cause harm to others. I disagree that is the Church’s purview. Where is our fight? In the natural or in the spiritual? Believers lose because we try to fight either in arenas in which we are outgunned instead of our actual battlefield, or, win because, historically, the Church wielded the superior weaponry and manpower. Is this the message of Yeshua to the world? Did he not say, render unto Caesar? Leave the laws to the local lawmakers, and leave the people free to choose which areas to connect into. If some men deem some things okay for their people and the people agree, leave them alone to it. Judgment is the natural outcome of a chosen course of action and our Creator is not mocked.

Can we not trust YHWH, who said He has written His law into the hearts of every man so none are without excuse? The really big things man does to man, he knows are wrong, every people with conscience know to not do these things and should be able to police themselves (and mostly do, to varying degrees and successes). Leave the smaller grey areas also to the people to decide for themselves. Anything less than this and the Church cannot claim it affords people freewill.
The Church has no business legislating or enforcing. If individual church members wish to join the ranks of lawmakers or enforcement, that is their personal walk. There is nothing legal which states a man may not exercise his religion in the course of public office in the US, that is a twisting we have allowed over time.

You said, “What of the innocent children, who might be exposed to destructive notions and practices in pagan households or communities, opening the way to an increase in socially deleterious activity over the course of generations and thus affecting the whole of the commonwealth?” Is your position here that it is not only okay but a moral imperative for the Church to forcibly remove children from their parents if the parents are teaching them in ways contrary to doctrine and refuse to stop? What then, is to stop Pagans, in greater force, to do the same to believers and call it a moral imperative from their own perspectives? Again, you strive in the natural, and what you do to others will come around to be done to you as well.

“Or still again, should charismatic liars be permitted to publicly teach falsehoods that will confuse the minds and damage the souls of simple-minded folk?” – this again implies that you are in favor of censorship out of your own convictions. Who has the given right to determine these things? This is not free will. Drive the liars from the squares and they go underground to seed and grow until they have strength and numbers enough to reemerge. This is where we are today, so I don’t feel that was a solid strategy, not even according to basic psychology, and even were it not idolatry. Speak the truth and let that stand for itself in the face of the liars.

Curiously, you then say, “After all, what harm does it really do, if certain individuals go about celebrating some pagan festival in a particularly ribald or excessive way? As long as they don’t hurt anyone, or damage any property, should they not be allowed to do as they please, and take the responsibility for any self-harm on their own shoulders?” Do you feel that what a man says is more potent than what he does? If you wish to censor a liar from polluting the public sphere, why not this? Are the ribald, lewd, drunken revelries less damaging? Or are they less damaging because people need to “blow off steam” in order to expect them to adhere to Lent? When the Father changes a man’s heart, he no longer desires these things, so again I ask, how is the Church actually converting people? Are they not just providing sanctioned conditions in which men may continue to be exactly the same as they were before, yet feel righteous? Is that not a dangerous misleading?

As far as the trans question in public spaces today, as with many current issues, these are being forced on populations who are demonstrably against them. That is a deliberate act by the legislators and at that point, people should do what they must to put a stop to it. The people. Not the church. The church should definitely speak out against it (does the Church do this…?) and counsel their congregants.

The last three points of mine you responded to I find entirely dissatisfying and inadequate, but I won’t task you further (forgive me, I am direct – I do not mean any disrespect). The second one, I don’t believe you caught my point and I disagree with your assessment. I do agree that the only freedom is in the Truth which is Yeshua.

Thank you for the cordial discussion and I wish you and yours very well. 

JBL
JBL
1 year ago
Reply to  A E

Once again, A E, I’m grateful for the thoughtfulness and levelness of your reply.

I think I haven’t adequately explained my position, and so I’d like make some clarifications. When I speak of the Church, I intend mainly the united Church prior to the Schism. I am an Orthodox Christian, and believe that the Tradition has been maintained in its fullness only in Orthodoxy, so my comments regarding the Church can also be extended to the history and scope of the Orthodox Church, as well. On the other hand, while I have tremendous respect and affection for many aspects of the (especially historical) Catholic Church, I believe that, following the Schism, it strayed in several consequential ways from the true path, and so fell into a variety of dire and overly political attitudes that in many infamous cases had terrible consequences. So, though I am bound to quibble with much of our contemporary censure of the Catholics, I think I can for the most part agree with the critiques of Catholic abuses that you have so far broached.

With regard to the Church of the first millennium, however, the use of violence was strikingly minimal, even by the standards of our contemporary peaceful democracies, to say nothing of the polities of the ancient world, where the pacifism and unarmed victory of the Christians was truly incredible. In the first centuries of the Church’s rise, which I consider to offer the historical model for Christ-like behavior in the full scope of our complicated human societies, the Church never relied on “superior weaponry and manpower”; quite the contrary. Even when it had gained universal authority throughout the Roman Empire, episodes of violence against heretics were exceedingly rare, and, when they occurred, came almost exclusively through uncontrolled mobs or through the temporal power of the Roman state — a political apparatus with a long prior history of relying on extreme brutality to put down insurrections. What is amazing is not that such violence appeared in the context of the Empire, but that it was used so sparingly.

There were, to be sure, many very prohibitive religious laws in place in Christendom, and this might be the locus of our dispute. We seem to have two different ideas of the just extent of Christian influence over the political sphere. I think you would limit it unreasonably, and that was the reason for the questions I posed in my last response. My only purpose with them was to indicate that, in many cases, a perfectly laissez faire approach to cultural or social or religious problems is impossible. I had no intention of suggesting answers to these questions, and still less of indicating how I would act were I in the position of the legislator — a role for which I feel myself profoundly inadequate, even in theory. I definitely do not support, for instance, the removal of children from parental custody, or universal censorship of un-Christian ideas, or anything of the sort. But I also do not believe that, in a Christian society, it is reasonable or consistent to, for instance, permit the absolutely free practice of pagan rites in communities within a Christian nation, or to ignore horrendous abuses which are occurring in nearby polities, or to allow clearly heretical movements to gain such social and political power that they begin to threaten the equilibrium of the Christian order. Again, it is extremely difficult to find the right place to draw these lines. My argument is only that such lines have to be drawn within, and not outside of, the legal framework of a Christian nation.

Now, having said that, you several times make an excellent point regarding our present plight, and here we are entirely of one mind: we must be wary of granting any greater power to a governmental juggernaut which is already too inclined toward totalitarianism. The last thing we need are new laws, even if the aims of these laws seem to be good and sound in and of themselves.

Unfortunately, our conversation has been a bit ambiguous, because it is not always clear when we are talking about history, and when we are talking about the present day. I think we probably largely agree on the proper attitude and strategy of Christians today; our main dispute centers on the historical attitude and action of the Church, which (as it presently seems to me) you misunderstand through a combination of (unhappily common) historical mischaracterizations on the one hand, and underestimation of the full range of complex difficulties naturally entailed by the mere existence of a Christian commonwealth, particularly in a pagan world, on the other. I suspect, though I am not certain, that our disagreement comes down to a dispute on the proper relations between “church” and “state.” It seems at times that you are proposing a neat division between the two spheres; for my part, I think that so clean a separation is impossible even practically speaking. The question is always what kind of influence of the one on the other there should be, to what extent, and governed by what principles and authority.

This was my point about the Christian statesman. We agree that “If individual church members wish to join the ranks of lawmakers or enforcement, that is their personal walk,” and we agree that it is a modern perversion to hold that “a man may not exercise his religion in the course of public office”; but I do not think you are evaluating the manifold ways in which Christian beliefs will necessarily influence and change the lawgiver’s determination of what laws are right and fitting, particularly if he lives in a nominally Christian society. I’ll limit myself to a single example: can a Christian lawgiver, in good conscience and without betraying his faith, tolerate the existence of open idolatry in his nation, or accept a legal framework which treats idolatry as if it were somehow not a crime against God, when this practice has been prohibited again and again in the strongest possible terms by God Himself, throughout both the Old and the New Testaments?

As for your closing remarks, I will even thank you for your directness, but I would have still better appreciated some clearer indication of how I missed your point, or in what way you found my responses “dissatisfying and inadequate.” I won’t try to guess at this — I’ve already made that mistake once in our conversation — so I’ll have to leave the matter lie where it has fallen, with an open invitation to you to pick it up again, should you feel, as I do, that something edifying might come of our further dialogue.

Be that as it will, I certainly return your kind closing; my best wishes to you and yours.

Luis Meriño Vásquez
Luis Meriño Vásquez
1 year ago

This has always been part of Carnivals. What’s new with this? Lol Pff haha 😂😂😬🙄😒

Last edited 1 year ago by Luis Meriño Vásquez