Twig pentagram
High Priest
Halloween is harmless.
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Umm, you mean according to the Hebrew language?
You can't just write off multiple accounts of anyone's enemy as propaganda, especially if you have no counter evidence.
Assalamualaikum.
From the Review of Religions:
Halloween Harmless or Harmful Fun? - The Review of Religions
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The word comes from the Location where the alleged sacrifices took place, the word itself is in reference to the place of burning, regardless. It's a language thing. So the word itself means "place of burning".Same difference in this instance. It is the Hebrew Bible which describes the alleged sacrifices, and a Hebrew word used to name the supposed location of them.
Where's the counter evidence? The Stillborn youths may be some evidence, maybe they simply burned them in the same location? There's no conclusive evidence against it.You just posted from the same page as me, which contains the counter evidence. Modern archaeological discoveries, such as I referenced, indicate that these were graveyards for the stillborn, not centres of child sacrifice.
[/QUOTE]Further, all of these accounts are drawn from the same sources, all of whom were mortal enemies of the Carthaginians. Had the Carthaginians won, it would probably be the Hebrews and Romans we thought these things about. So while I can't "write them off" entirely, I have to take that fact into account, and I cannot rely on them as objective and solid evidence.
The word comes from the Location where the alleged sacrifices took place, the word itself is in reference to the place of burning, regardless. It's a language thing. So the word itself means "place of burning".
Where's the counter evidence? The Stillborn youths may be some evidence, maybe they simply burned them in the same location? There's no conclusive evidence against it.
The Hebrews never fought the Carthaganians, what did Philo have against them? What did Tertullian have against them?
The Carthaganians are only mentioned as "Tarshish", and never negatively as far as I'm aware. So thus, Philo has no reason to speak so terribly of them, as the Jews have never really had a problem with Tarshish.
It is what we celebrate....costumes, candy, the fall season, pumpkins & ghoulish delights.It's harmless fun for children. They have no idea of what Halloween used to be in old days-for them it is just about dressing up and having tons of sugary stuff!
I don't like having a fuss at things in which people read too much into or imagine. Remember kids minds are simple and Halloween is just that-Halloween!
I've always participated when I was young and satanic stuff NEVER crossed my mind. I'll leave you all at that.
Perhaps you are confusing Pan for Satan. Pan did indeed have antlers and hooved feet, but he most certainly was not regarded as a devil, lord of the underworld, and Samhain wasn't his holiday to begin with.Samhain was a festival to satan...the lord of the underworld.
i think they did believe in him.
There isn't one, exactly: Thanatos is the closest thing to it, though like Eurynomos he's not actually a God, he's just a daemon. Thanatos probably deserves reverence more than Eurynomos, though. That guy just sat by the Styx and stripped the flesh from mortal bones before they entered the Underworld.
The original claim was that Samhain was a festival for Satan. Regardless of what unsavory rites the ancient Celts may or may not have practiced, that's patently absurd.All I'm saying is that the basis of Halloween and the Druidic Religion seems to be enmeshed in Human Sacrifice, Cannibalism, and Blood orgies.
And us over-sized and over-aged children!Its for the children, period.
We tend to view them archetypally rather than as hard polytheists.
Well, I can't say I disapprove. The Greeks ended up doing pretty much the same thing: viewing their deities as ideals rather than entities. It's a little confusing that you refer to daemons as Gods, though that was my misunderstanding, and I apologise if I was a bit abrupt.
I'm afraid I don't know anything about demonolatry. Is it a left-hand-path thing, or are the daemons more generally benevolent, as they were for the Greeks?
Why does it matter what its purpose may once have been?