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  • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    No.

    Jesus may have quoted Aesop a few times, although those fables’ earliest recording are around a thousand years later.

    However, take for example the Ark of the Covenant:

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    It bears resemblance to Egyptian arks to their gods, like one found in King Tut’s tomb

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    To the Israelites when asked to construct their Ark, the concept would have been familiar to them, as it’s something the pagans would have done. Big difference is that the pagans put a depiction of the god on theirs, while the Israelites have angels blowing down to Seemingly Nothing - an unseen God. This still would have been drawing from pagan beliefs and traditions.

    Or, take for example, the narrative of Abraham sacrificing Isaac in Genesis 22. The followers of Molech would have commonly sacrificed their children to their idols to show upmost devotion to their god- so God tests Abraham to see if he has the same level of devotion to his God.

    However, it is worth noting in both of these cases, God makes a point of doing something differently (unseen God on the ark, cancelling the sacrifice, verse 8 “God will provide for himself the lamb” foreshadowing Jesus)

    There’s probably many more examples of this. But it shows the Israelites would have been well acquainted with pagan culture instead of shelter, and even God was willing to adapt it.

  • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Nope! Watching a movie about Thor or something is fine. It only doesn’t work when you begin to worship Thor over God, which breaks the first commandment

  • PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social
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    1 year ago

    Christianity IS ancient mythology.

    Ipso facto it’s a sin to be a Christian, per Christianity.

    But if you apply logic to any of these devoted superstitions none of them make any sense.

        • OccamsRazer@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You can’t use logic based on a belief and simultaneously write it off as mythology if you want to be logically consistent. You first assert that Christianity is mythology, but then reference Christianity itself to “prove” that people who believe in it are sinners, framing them in terms of the belief that you just asserted was false. Your whole thing is nonsensical.

          • PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social
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            1 year ago

            Watch this:

            Christianity is mythology. None of it is real.

            Yet.

            There are nincompoops who believe it is real.

            And one of the things people who believe that silly mythology is that people shouldn’t worship mythologies.

            Deal with it, bro.

            Religion kills. Science saves.

            But only one is easy to learn.

  • Jaysyn@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t see why it would be considering Christianity stole their entire creation mythos from the Sumerians.

    • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Is there any actual evidence that it’s stolen? Or that two geographically close cultures had a story from the same origin.

      It wouldn’t really disprove anything if they’re making a truth claim tbh. If anything, it’ll actually prove it further if the story is popping up in other cultures.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Plenty of writers in the early Christian church continued to draw heavily on Greek and Roman mythology as a source for literary analogies—so a background knowledge of classical mythology is necessary to fully understand foundational Christian literature.

    • saltesc@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, but Paul kind of ruined Greece via Thessaloniki and Korinthos. Granted, the social hierarchy around the old gods backed by “the one true God for all” Christian narrative sure made it easy to turn common Greeks against their ancient culture and religion.

      And they’ve been doing great ever since! cough, cough

  • Somewhiteguy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Been a Christian for a long time (1989). I’ve consumed copious amounts of ancient mythology and folklore. People who don’t understand that you can read something that challenges your faith and still follow through with better understanding afterwards is the issue. If you read something and it doesn’t make you think deeper about yourself, faith, world, or whatever what’s the point? Those in the church (Christian or not) that tell you that reading something is a “sin” are probably ones that teeter on the edge of losing their grasp as it is and don’t want you doing the same. Most of them can’t explain why it’s so challenging, they just know it’s there.

  • TronBronson@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    No. but you could losely apply thou shall not worship false gods. However learning, and worshipping are two completely different things.

    Christianity was formed long before there was media, so there are no scriptures that prevent you from enjoying media, and last i checked nothing that prevented you from learning.

    The sin is saying someone like Donald Trump is Jesus, and worshipping him in your home and the house of god. That’s what’s sending everyone on a first class ticket to hell. You’re cool tho. Coming from a Catholic with a lotta guilt.

    Here’s a list of sins with the biblical citations. You tell me if watching zues documentaries is a sin?

    https://ee5fcc47c77f8b0abe07-686e11708c76f836b90a9b9df2c4a268.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/uploaded/b/0e10886044_1599234967_biblical-sins.pdf