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6 votes
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Why you're christian
7 votes -
Finland's former interior minister Päivi Räsänen has gone on trial in Helsinki accused of inciting anti-LGBT+ hate speech
4 votes -
XXX-Files: Who torched the Pornhub palace?
5 votes -
Christianity hasn’t failed in India. Conversion isn’t its only goal
3 votes -
Happy Solstice!
For those of us in the northern hemisphere, today is the hiemal solstice. Today is the shortest day of the year, and for the next half of the year, the period of daylight will only get longer....
For those of us in the northern hemisphere, today is the hiemal solstice. Today is the shortest day of the year, and for the next half of the year, the period of daylight will only get longer.
Since ancient times, people have marked this day each year, through celebration and through the construction of buildings that line up with the sun or stars on this day; for instance, Stonehenge in Britain and Newgrange in Ireland both act as solstice indicators. Celtic, Chinese, Indian, ancient Roman, and even ancient Hebrew solstice ceremonies are recorded in various forms, with some (such as Newgrange) dating as far back as 3200 BC.
Today, many of these solstice ceremonies have been wrapped up into the Christian winter holiday of Christmas. For instance, the Celtic tradition of hanging evergreen plants, such as holly and ivy, as a sign of hospitality became the British Christian tradition of hanging mistletoe. Even the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah bears a striking resemblance to the Celtic idea of the Yule Log, a fire that was meant to burn for twelve days without re-fueling.
In addition, the solstice itself remains meaningful to many, both in mainstream religions and in neo-Pagan revival movements. So, to all of you who celebrate, happy Solstice, and may the sun shine warm on your face for the rest of the year.
34 votes -
This wealthy Dallas church owns the most clergy homes in Texas — and it costs taxpayers six figures a year
11 votes -
Megan Rohrer elected as first openly transgender bishop in US Lutheran church
11 votes -
Orthodox Marian hymn: Agni Parthene/Maria, Blessed Virgin (Church Slavonic rendition)
4 votes -
February 16th is Fettisdagen (Fat Tuesday) here in Sweden, our name for the Catholic celebration of Shrove Tuesday – bake your own Semla with this easy, traditional recipe
12 votes -
Denmark sermons law could stifle free worship, warns Church of England bishop – Robert Innes says proposed translation law could affect religious freedoms across Europe
13 votes -
How the sun illuminates Spanish missions on the winter solstice
4 votes -
Abandoning all hope: The divine comedy by Dante, explained
3 votes -
Atheists are sometimes more religious than Christians
11 votes -
Biblically accurate angels and the first sphere of the angelic hierarchy explained
13 votes -
An old Norse 'godhouse' has been discovered in Norway – site reflects how the rise of Christianity to the south affected the worship of the Norse pantheon
8 votes -
The Intrusion and the Decalogue
4 votes -
Priest recorded having group sex on altar of Pearl River church, police say; three arrested
9 votes -
CO-VIDs: Adventure Games about Jesus
4 votes -
Racism in the USA is higher among white Christians than among the nonreligious. That's no coincidence
28 votes -
The Church of Sweden has more female than male priests for the first time – a sign of huge strides for gender equality since women were first allowed to be ordained in 1960
8 votes -
The Heavenly Court
4 votes -
The invention of satanic witchcraft by medieval authorities was initially met with skepticism
6 votes -
Undercover at a Christian gay-to-straight conversion camp
12 votes -
Men quitting masturbation: "Porn addiction" support groups reinforce damaging gender stereotypes
25 votes -
Roe of “Roe v. Wade” says Christian right paid her to be anti-choice mouthpiece
17 votes -
In defense of hellfire: The rhetoric of damnation has been lost. But how else can we adequately condemn injustice?
8 votes -
My teenage rebellion was fundamentalist Christianity
7 votes -
An Oxford professor, an evangelical collector, and a missing gospel of Mark: A scholar claimed that he discovered a first-century gospel fragment, now faces allegations of theft, cover-up, and fraud
11 votes -
Danish Lutheran minister who attracted international attention by proclaiming that there is no God or afterlife, but retracted after being suspended, has died
5 votes -
Päivi Räsänen is facing new police investigations for citing Bible verses on social media to object to the Lutheran church's participation in an LGBT pride event
4 votes -
A prominent Northern California mega-church whose members believe their prayers heal the sick and raise the dead is advising the faithful to wash their hands
7 votes -
Three cheers for socialism - Christian love and political practice
7 votes -
Icelanders celebrate Bolludagur – the cream-filled buns are generally made of choux pastry and topped with a chocolate or caramel glaze
6 votes -
The multimillion-dollar Christian group attacking LGBTQ+ rights
19 votes -
'It’s not easy to believe in a god when people tell you God doesn’t like us'
13 votes -
I used to be an anti-LGBTQ Evangelical. Here’s what finally changed my heart and mind.
7 votes -
One goal of United Methodists’ plan to split the church over same-sex marriage and clergy: Avoid lawsuits
8 votes -
A scandal in Oxford: The curious case of the stolen gospel
7 votes -
United Methodist Church announces plan to split over gay marriage, LGBTQ clergy
17 votes -
Gay, Christian and a former preacher, I'm coming out to help anyone hurt by Folau
10 votes -
The Church of Sweden has unveiled the country’s first-ever LGBT+ altarpiece and homophobes are very upset about it
11 votes -
In US, decline of Christianity continues at rapid pace
18 votes -
Click to pray eRosary: The new smart rosary to pray for peace in the world
8 votes -
Christian right tactics to fight trans rights: seperate the T from LGBT
12 votes -
The Christian right is helping drive liberals away from religion
18 votes -
The Christian converts who are setting fire to sacred Aboriginal objects
8 votes -
Teacher sues Christian School over marriage equality beliefs
6 votes -
Jerry Falwell’s aides break their silence - Current and former Liberty University officials describe a culture of fear and self-dealing at the largest Christian college in the world
10 votes -
Excerpt from "Myth and Ritual in Christianity" by A. Watts
... The very insistence on the one historical incarnation as a unique step in a course of events leading to the future Kingdom of God reveals the psychology of Western culture most clearly. It...
... The very insistence on the one historical incarnation as a unique step in a course of events leading to the future Kingdom of God reveals the psychology of Western culture most clearly. It shows a mentality for which the present, real world is, in itself, joyless and barren, without value. The present can have value only in terms of meaning—if, like a word, it points to something beyond itself. This "beyond" which past and present events "mean" is the future. This the Western intellectual, as well as the literate common man, finds his life meaningless except in terms of a promising future. But the future is a "tomorrow which never comes", and for this reason Western culture has a "frantic" character. It is a desperate rush in pursuit of an ever-receding "meaning", because the promising future is precisely the famous carrot which the clever driver dangles before his donkey's nose from the end of his whip. Tragically enough, this frantic search for God, for the ideal life, in the future renders the course of history anything but a series of unique steps towards a goal. Its real result is to make history repeat itself faster and more furiously, confusing "progress" with increased agitation.
—Alan Watts, Myth and Ritual in Christianity. 1954
11 votes