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so I was wondering, before the Hebrews came along...what exactly was everyone?

2007-12-02 13:42:56 · 24 answers · asked by ~Heathen Princess~ 7 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Ok, let's play hypothetically. Let's go on a reeeaaaallllly big limb here and say Adam and Eve were the beginning. Then were did the "pagans" come from? And why is there absolutely NO evidence of the Hebrews before about 3000 BCE (And I don't mean just the faith. I mean the entire civilization)

2007-12-02 13:51:06 · update #1

24 answers

Oh, you silly Pagans.
Our earliest ancestors were all Yahweh-fearing folk riding around on dinosaurs 6,000 years ago. Don't you know anything? ;-)

2007-12-02 17:32:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

The term "Pagan" needs to be defined. It's been maligned by certain organized religions that had more money, marketing power, and arms.

Are we talking about people who had a reverence for Nature, or felt that their lives depended upon a close union with the seasonal process of the world around them? Or people who worshiped a bunch of "made-up" Gods or their ancestors?

I think Og the Caveman had a very different conception of God than the later tribes such as us could ever conceive.

And I think our ancestor Og would be disgusted with us for wasting some much time fighting over religious doctrines when there are stones to be sharpened and technologies to be hunted.

Our ancestor Og was born way before BC, but I'll also bet he was also born before B.S.

2007-12-02 14:50:40 · answer #2 · answered by Boomer Wisdom 7 · 0 0

Tell your friend to check out the archaeological evidence in Israel. El was just the top tier of the Canaanite pantheon and JHWH was on the second tier of the pantheon. The texts from the Ugarit dig are the most extensive. The reason that the text from Exodus states that the proper way to prepare the altar for sacrifice was by pouring blood on the horns is because the altar was in the form of "Bull El". Hebrew religion went from Pantheistic to Monolatrial to Monotheistic, and the archaeological evidence proves it. The digs in the "City of David" uncovered not only a reverence to JHWH the lord, but also uncovered that 80% of the households had Asherah figurines.

2007-12-02 13:54:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

properly, initially i don't understand of any Pagan faith that has a bible according to se. There are Pagan religions that relatively have books that are seen could reads, yet we've not got a great e book of doctrine in our religions. As to animal sacrifices - the quick answer is not any. i comprehend of no Pagan that could kill an animal and flow away it as an offering to a god. that doesn't be interior the moral policies of any Pagan faith i'm attentive to. that's a convention to grant a component of food from the dinner occasion to the gods - yet that isn't what human beings think of of while they think of "animal sacrifice." edit - re your further info - that's an prolonged communicate on why human beings stopped sacrificing animals. in case you prefer to comprehend why *I* does not kill an animal and supply the finished animal to my gods that's for 2 motives - that's totally wasteful and that i'm particular my gods do not want this style of element. you will get comparable solutions from others alongside with merely "present day sensibilities." there is likewise greater historic debate to this difficulty than one would think of. you have even have been given to realize as I reported earlier that we've not got a e book of doctrine for our religions and so despite the fact that if we knew for absolute particular our ancestors did something we are actually not required to maintain up that practice. additionally, not all Pagan religions try to reconstruct something and so do not difficulty themselves with what the ancients would have performed - Wicca is a fashionable faith as an occasion.

2016-11-13 07:58:43 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes. Go back far enough, and all of out ancestors were "pagan." Even in the Hebrew "race," before Abraham was willing to offer up his son for a sacrifice (see, sacrifice - pagan) they were pagan.....calling on the gods of land and fertility.

2007-12-02 14:17:20 · answer #5 · answered by tanagila0530 4 · 0 0

Pagan

2007-12-02 13:45:26 · answer #6 · answered by Macy 2 · 3 0

Pagans are anything that aren't mainstream religions. Who is to judge what is pagan? Just like beauty it's in the eye of the beholder.

2007-12-02 13:47:02 · answer #7 · answered by Bart 2 · 3 1

origionally the hebrews were pagan. in fact, early christianity was not only pagan, but polytheistic. that is a fact few people are aware off. so id say this relization of yours is mistaken.

ps ashrah is an example of an early christian deity other than yaweh.

2007-12-02 13:47:13 · answer #8 · answered by michael n 6 · 4 1

They were pagan. There were certainly different sects, denominations, styles, and ideas of Paganism, but they were pagan. Most Hebraic scholars acknowledge this, as far as I have ever known. They might refer to them as "heathens', but as far as most Hebraic religions are concerned, the two are one and the same.

2007-12-02 13:47:23 · answer #9 · answered by Katie Short, Atheati Princess 6 · 3 1

Christianity is a pagan religion.

2007-12-02 13:50:49 · answer #10 · answered by Doc Occam 7 · 5 1

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