Trick-or-bible (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion



Message


MissImmortalPain -> Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:24:35 PM)


I felt the need to share this. It is about a man that will be handing out bibles rather than candy in protest of kids celebrating satans birth. Anyone want to comment?

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/pocket-sized-bibles-halloween-treat-091125806.html




tazzygirl -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:31:16 PM)

Its like the "jesus ween" going around. If its what they want to do, who am I to argue. However, I wouldnt be taking my kid to that house.




littlewonder -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:32:08 PM)

ok, why is this a big deal??

Where I grew up this was typical and normal. I would get at least two bibles every year at Halloween and we'd get them at the beginning of the school year as well from the Gideon people.

None of us cared. It was just another thing in our bag that we either kept around the house or our parents did something with after they went through our candy to tell us what we could keep and what we couldn't.

Now my daughter never got any but she'd get little pamphlets about God or Jesus or church services from people. Some I kept and we read them or I threw them away because we weren't interested in it. No big deal.






MissImmortalPain -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:34:04 PM)

I didn't think I implied that it was a big deal. I just wondered what peoples thoughts were about it.




tj444 -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:42:59 PM)

well, imo its not very eco-friendly since if i ever got one it would go into the garbage, imo, many others would as well. I decided as a child to be non-religious and i dont like people pushing things on me and religion especially. Say no to drugs, say no to booze, say no to bibles... [:D]





Kirata -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:56:13 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain

Anyone want to comment?

I think this whole evangelical business of trying to shove Jesus under everyone's nose at any opportunity borders on the depraved, and when you're talking about children I think it's disgusting.

K.




tazzygirl -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 10:56:43 PM)

I agree.




tazzygirl -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 11:23:58 PM)

Churches have put on their own haunted houses. Not something I really objected too... but not something I ever went too, or would have taken my kid too. I made the decision when he was born not to push any religion on him... he was allowed to decide for himself. I didnt hide religion... didnt change it... explained it.. he even attended church with my mother, when he asked to go. The idea that anyone would take that decision out of my hands would have royally pissed me off.




SpanishMatMaster -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 11:33:47 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain
I felt the need to share this. It is about a man that will be handing out bibles rather than candy in protest of kids celebrating satans birth. Anyone want to comment?
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/pocket-sized-bibles-halloween-treat-091125806.html

My first idea...
1. Welcome him.
2. Tell him I need more, many more.
3. When I have all he wants to give to me, tell him thanks for the fuel.
4. Slam the door.




MissImmortalPain -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/28/2011 11:33:52 PM)

Tazzy I agree with you whole heartedly. This is how I have raised my son when it comes to religion as well. I know in the end he will decide what he believes.




Termyn8or -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 12:37:14 AM)

"1. Haloween is NOT a celebration of Satan's birth or Satan's any......"

Eight posts, well I guess people do have lives. All this ghosts and goblin shit is just shit really. It was a stupid tradtion that became something. It's no different than the holidays of the Odinists and other "pagans" to be incorporated into the Catholic faith, which no matter how much any of the protest-ant religions can talk, is the Father of most of the potest-ant religions. Martin Luther died a good Catholic.

A day of reverence for the dead, eventualy with some frivolity, that's all it is.

And, just to get loosed on the Bible thumpers. God allowed, in fact made it so that Satan was born. As such Satan is His creature as much as you or I. Give the fucker a good Bday party like anyone else ! Otherwise you might piss God off. He created everything then that means he created him too, you have no right to be pissed off about tha. Who the fuck do you think you are ?

Religion my ass.

T^T




tahoe69 -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 12:41:55 AM)

                        




HannahLynn -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 1:32:25 AM)

he's a fucking ignorant twit, and if i'd have gone by his house when i was a kid and he'd given me a little bible, we'd have egged and t-ped his fucking place but good.




Aylee -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 3:06:45 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain


I felt the need to share this. It is about a man that will be handing out bibles rather than candy in protest of kids celebrating satans birth. Anyone want to comment?

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/pocket-sized-bibles-halloween-treat-091125806.html


Oh well, a mini-bible is so much better than those horrible Peanut-Butter-Kisses in the black and/or orange wrappers that we used to get. Unfortunately I think that they still sell them.

Of course all Charlie Brown ever got was a bag of rocks.

For goodness sake, essentially little children are going door-to-door and begging and you folks are claiming religion being shoved down their throats if a mini-bible is dropped in their pumpkin. [8|]

If it bothers you that much, don't let your children go trick-or-treating. Mini-bibles are right up there with the toothbrushes the dentist hands out. *sigh*




xxblushesxx -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 3:23:13 AM)

No biggie as far as I'm concerned. It makes him feel good, so leave him to it.




SpanishMatMaster -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 4:42:27 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aylee
If it bothers you that much, don't let your children go trick-or-treating. Mini-bibles are right up there with the toothbrushes the dentist hands out. *sigh*
A question: Would you have the same opinion if the book was "My Fight" of Adolf Hitler?
I am just asking a honest question. But please answer. Thank you.




DarkSteven -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 5:17:27 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain


I felt the need to share this. It is about a man that will be handing out bibles rather than candy in protest of kids celebrating satans birth. Anyone want to comment?



WTF?  I didn't even KNOW that Satan was supposed to have a birthday.  I just checked Wikipedia regarding Halloween and it never mentioned that belief.  (Which makes sense, because the celebration of Halloween predates Christianity.)  So this guy is taking the holiday and putting his own twisted spin on it, making crap up to "prove" his point.

I am not a believer in pushing your kinks onto innocent bystanders, such as flogging another in public.  I consider handing out Bibles to kids who are expecting candy, to pretty much be analogous to forcing his kink onto others. 

People like that give Christianity a bad name.  I hope the kids play lots of tricks on him.




thishereboi -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 5:26:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SpanishMatMaster

quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain
I felt the need to share this. It is about a man that will be handing out bibles rather than candy in protest of kids celebrating satans birth. Anyone want to comment?
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/pocket-sized-bibles-halloween-treat-091125806.html

My first idea...
1. Welcome him.
2. Tell him I need more, many more.
3. When I have all he wants to give to me, tell him thanks for the fuel.
4. Slam the door.



You do realize that he isn't going door to door handing them out right? You do know how trick or treating works?


OP - If that's what makes him happy, I don't see the harm in it. But I like the idea of collecting food for the needy much better.




kalikshama -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 5:36:17 AM)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halloween

Historian Nicholas Rogers, exploring the origins of Halloween, notes that while "some folklorists have detected its origins in the Roman feast of Pomona, the goddess of fruits and seeds, or in the festival of the dead called Parentalia, it is more typically linked to the Celtic festival of Samhain, whose original spelling was Samuin (pronounced sow-an or sow-in)".[1] The name of the festival historically kept by the Gaels and Celts in the British Isles is derived from Old Irish and means roughly "summer's end".[1][2][3]

According to the Oxford Dictionary of English folk lore: "Certainly Samhain was a time for festive gatherings, and medieval Irish texts and later Irish, Welsh, and Scottish folklore use it as a setting for supernatural encounters, but there is no evidence that it was connected with the dead in pre-Christian times, or that pagan religious ceremonies were held."[4]

The Irish myths which mention Samhain were written in the 10th and 11th centuries by Christian monks. This is around 200 years after the Catholic church inaugurated All Saints Day and at least 400 years after Ireland became Christian.[

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samhain

Samain or Samuin was the name of the feis or festival at the beginning of winter observed in medieval Ireland. It is attested in Old Irish literature beginning in the 10th century. The festival marked the end of the season for trade and warfare and was an ideal date for tribal assemblies, where the local kings gathered their people. These gatherings in turn are a popular setting for early Irish tales.[10]

...Gaelic custom of wearing costumes and masks, was an attempt to copy the evil spirits or ward off them. In Scotland the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened faces, dressed in white.[16][17] Candle lanterns (Gaelic: samhnag), carved from turnips were part of the traditional festival. Large turnips were hollowed out, carved with faces, placed in windows to ward off evil spirits.[17]

Guisers — men in disguise, were prevalent in 16th century in the Scottish countryside. Children going door to door "guising" (or "Galoshin" on the south bank of the lower Clyde) in costumes and masks carrying turnip lanterns, offering entertainment of various sorts in return for food or coins, was traditional in 19th century, and continued well into 20th century.[18] At the time of mass transatlantic Irish and Scottish immigration that popularized Halloween in North America, Halloween in Ireland and Scotland had a strong tradition of guising and pranks.[19]




Owner59 -> RE: Trick-or-bible (10/29/2011 5:36:25 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: MissImmortalPain

Anyone want to comment?

I think this whole evangelical business of trying to shove Jesus under everyone's nose at any opportunity borders on the depraved, and when you're talking about children I think it's disgusting.

K.



Couple years ago in a little town called Brookside/Mendam here in Jersey, there was a church who sponsored a "house of horrors" type of Halloween event,inviting kids and parents to fun and a party and candy(for the kids).

Well,it turns out the was never any intention of having fun.Instead of gools and goblins,they had video and images of actual abortions complete with pics of fetuses.

By the time the kids had gotten throught sheet "maze" that was set up,they had seen enough to produce screams and tears and a lot of nighmares.

The reaction from the kids was absolute horror(the real kind)and outraged parents who felt they had been mugged and duped.Even my con friends thought it was wrong.

The church was un-apologetic and said they stood by their "house of horrors" idea.There were a number of families including my friend`s who left that church to join another.

It took quite a while for people to forget what that "church" did and it was the 1st and last time a stunt like that was pulled there.





Page: [1] 2 3 4 5   next >   >>

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.0546875