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2006-06-21 06:42:09 · 18 answers · asked by ╚♫═AEDAN═♫╝ 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

18 answers

Technically speaking, yes.

Most Christian holidays (Easter and the Easter Bunny, for example) and rituals have their origins with pagan ceremonies. They were adopted by the Christian Church in an effort to abolish pagan practices- the logic was "hey, we have the same holiday, and we do it better, therefore your holiday is now outlawed".

In a sense, modern Christians unwittingly practice pagan ideals, and as such may be called, "Christian Pagans"

You will more than likely receive responses from those who say "CHRISTIANS ARE NOT PAGAN, WE WORSHIP OUR ONE TRUE GOD"

Blind logic and assumptions without proof were also driving forces behind paganism. Funny, no?

2006-06-21 06:44:48 · answer #1 · answered by the_dude 4 · 1 0

Paganism is a made-up fantasy religion designed for two things. The first is to make money selling books and paraphenalia. The second is as a tool for marxists to try and seperate people from legitimate religions like christianity. Since pagansism is complete bullshit, it is easy to get people to drop it later on to become atheists. The goal here is to prevent people from having a moral compass so that they freely accept the sick behaviors promoted by the marxists. The whole point is inimical to christianity and judaism. They are hostile toward christians but go so far as to engage in blood liable and support genocide against jews.

If you are a christian considering paganism, you should investigate what I just told you about the movement and understand what they are trying to do to you and why.

Look at the company these people keep and the behavior they engage in. It's very valuable in understanding where they are really coming from.

2006-06-21 13:52:15 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

NO!.....There Is No Such Thing As Christian-Paganism!!!!!!

2006-06-21 13:46:51 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's called "Christianity".

It originates from a man named Paul who, as he claimed, "met Jesus"(even though he thought Jesus was crucified) on a trip to Damascus. He wrote most of what Christians call "The New Testament". His concept of God is known as the "Trinity", which diefies Jesus just like Roman Pagan religions at his time.

2006-06-21 13:46:57 · answer #4 · answered by haterhater 3 · 0 0

It is a contradiction in terms. Christians cannot be Pagans. Christians worship God completely and have nothing else before Him. As the Bible says, you can't serve two masters.

2006-06-21 13:46:38 · answer #5 · answered by Elle 6 · 0 0

Yahoo or Google it using these terms below and you will be surprised. :-) Yes, there is such a thing called christo-paganism.

christo-pagan
christo-wicca
christo-wiccan

2006-06-21 13:45:21 · answer #6 · answered by Nikki 6 · 0 0

There's such a thing as just about anything - you name a kind of spirituality, and I can guarantee you, someone out there follows it (someone living in California, in all likelihood. :-)

2006-06-21 13:45:06 · answer #7 · answered by evolver 6 · 0 0

We celebrate Jesus' birth and death both on pagan holidays. We have pagan symbols in our churches.
We are Christian-Pagans.

2006-06-21 13:45:27 · answer #8 · answered by Rev Mel 3 · 0 0

I've heard of Wiccans who use Christian figures and themes (JESUS, love thy neighbor, etc), and I suppose a pagan could as well. However they themselves would be pagan or wiccan and not Christian.

2006-06-21 13:44:57 · answer #9 · answered by dani_kin 6 · 0 0

As long as you can put two words together anything is possible in the world of semantics. What about a good devil and a bad god?

2006-06-21 14:13:47 · answer #10 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

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