Posted on 10/29/2009 8:15:56 PM PDT by tlb
. TV preacher Pat Robertsons Web site has just issued a bulletin warning Americans of the real threat we face this season: Demons may be lurking in our Halloween candy.
In a column on the Christian Broadcasting Networks Web site, writer Kimberly Daniels asserts that demons sneak into bags of Halloween candy at grocery stores.
[M]ost of the candy sold during this season has been dedicated and prayed over by witches, Daniels wrote. I do not buy candy during the Halloween season. Curses are sent through the tricks and treats of the innocent whether they get it by going door to door or by purchasing it from the local grocery store. The demons cannot tell the difference.
The Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, urged Robertson and Daniels to lighten up.
Ive heard of the devil being in the details, but to think hes lurking inside a Snickers bar is a little too much, Lynn quipped. Pat Robertson has always peddled some scary stuff, but this is over the top.
Daniels asserts that far from being harmless fun, Halloween is a veritable doorway to hell, full of literal monsters.
Halloween is much more than a holiday filled with fun and tricks or treats, she wrote. It is a time for the gathering of evil that masquerades behind the fictitious characters of Dracula, werewolves, mummies and witches on brooms. The truth is that these demons that have been presented as scary cartoons actually exist. I have prayed for witches who are addicted to drinking blood and howling at the moon.
(Excerpt) Read more at opposingviews.com ...
Why would you make that ridiculous leap of logic?
Isn't the taliban and the koran animals enough??
Shut the **** up you ignorant jackass
If you’d bothered to take religion “back to the egg”, as it were, you’d realize the so-called “feminists” have it right.
In the beginning, all paleo-religions were gynocentric.
Later, androcentric religion replaced the ~original~ pagan religions.
The very beginning of all pagan religion revolves around fertility, menstruation and their connection [in male minds] to “magic”.
For every ancient ithyphallic deity carving you find, there will be a hundred gravid, “earth mother” statues.
[check out Malta for some of the oldest “new” ones]
The cults of Hera and Diana predate the cults of male Greek and roman gods by millenia.
Until the way of the warrior ousted the way of matrifocal relgion [ie...EIREland], goddesses were above all gods.
The triple goddess was eternal and unchanging.
The “god” lasted only til he was ritually killed and replaced.
In the Nordic religion, the sun was *female* and the moon was *male*, unlike the gender reversal of today.
Unlike you, I am not satisfied to read a few books by one guy who chooses to ignore reality.
I backtracked historically until I found the seed of all ancient paganism, which, at its core, revolves around the agricultural seasons.
If you [and Hutton] are unnerved by that, that’s your problem.
“I suspect that instead of archeological reports/monographs you have warmed-over rehashes of 19th century diffusionist and mystical “scholarship.”
Quite the opposite, actually and I was fortunate enough to have bought them decades ago when they were not commanding the prices they do now.
None of them are “mystical” by any definition of the word.
*Most* of them are dryly mathematical and agonizingly full of scientific minutiae.
And to answer a question that should not need asking, you read FOLK LORE because ~within it~ are contained the ancient and core truths of a culture.
As you ~should~ know, the Celts had no written records.
ALL knowledge was passed down through the generations via stories [aka “folk lore”] so that those who followed would never forget whence they came.
The “CARMINA GADELICA” is a history book, “written” by the people who lived it.
Sheesh.
It’s as if the country has been overrun by arrogant, “infallible” know it alls who insist upon imposing the tyranny of faulty wisdom upon us all, isn’t it?
When a Freeper doesn’t answer questions directly and instead responds by posting links to Wikipedia and a fairly out-in-Left-field feminist website, I’d say my suspicious attitude is justified.
And this folks is why normal christians get a bad rap sometimes...from weirdo fringe see-the-devil-in-everything nutjobs like this...UNBELIEVABLE.
Halloween to me is a chance to empty out the scrap bag making costumes, gorge myself on the kid’s loot, and de-brain pumpkins. Nothing more.
And if you disagree with me, then you, sir, are worse than Hitler. /Gutfeld.
Pat Robertson neither wrote this piece nor published it. You’re free to criticize the author for the extreme views, but please try to only criticize Robertson when he truly deserves it.
I don’t want to know about the Tootsie Rolls.
My dog would see no irony in that cartoon.
Vatican Condemns Hallowe’en As Anti-Christian
Telegraph(UK) ^ | October 30th 2009
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2374765/posts
Not "feminist." Feminist. You posted a link to the Max Dashu website, whose first response to Hutton's book was to exclaim "I was staggered by the intense anti-feminism of this book..." Feminist "scholarship" at its (cough cough) finest.
And, BTW, in regards to religion and prehistory the feminists have it WRONG. This isn't taking religion "back to the egg." It's taking it back to the comparativist/evolutionist nonsense of Bachofen and Frazer and Co., writings that haven't been taken seriously in archaeological and anthropological circles in over 70 years. I very much doubt that any of your "recent" archaeological monographs use such stuff as a theoretical basis for any conclusion.
In the beginning, all paleo-religions were gynocentric.
Later, androcentric religion replaced the ~original~ pagan religions.
(Etc., etc. etc. that strays far afield from your original point about Halloween).
More stuff and nonsense. Airy 19th century speculations that were refuted for incoherencies and lack of evidence almost a century ago. For North America, read Kroeber's and Lowie's knock-down refutation of this approach -- from almost 90 years ago. In general, read Motz's _The Faces of the Goddess_.
There's no simple (or even complex) gyno- to andro- transition, the "earth mother" statues' religious significance is highly debatable (unless you're an acolyte of Gimbutas), and if you haven't read and agreed with Frazer directly, it's obvious you've swallowed his ideas hook, line, and sinker through secondary sources and "interpreters" of his.
I backtracked historically until I found the seed of all ancient paganism, which, at its core, revolves around the agricultural seasons.
If you [and Hutton] are unnerved by that, thats your problem.
Not unnerved, saddened. You've backtracked and landed in a bog of Victorian scholarly blather from some English and German armchair anthropologists. I do so hope you manage to extricate yourself from it.
As you ~should~ know, the Celts had no written records.
None? I though you were arguing that the Coligny calendar counted as a written record. Please make up your mind.
The CARMINA GADELICA is a history book, written by the people who lived it.
According to the 1900 edition I'm looking at as I type, it is a collection of "hymns and incantations" collected by Alexander Carmichael. It's not a history book, it's a folklore collection collected and edited by Mr. Carmichael. Looks interesting, but I see no indication that it provides any proof that would support your blunt thesis that "Halloween is the Celtic New Years Eve celebration. Nothing more, nothing less"
Still waiting for your defense of your thesis.
LOL!
I wonder if they know the true reason people started dressing up on All Hallows Eve?
HEY! You leave my candy corn and tootsie roll out of this!
Okie-dokie. Thanks for the tip!
I served this at a Halloween party and those who dared try it showed off their courage. LOL!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.