warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
Jehovah's Witnesses don't celebrate birthdays, for religious reasons.
Hmmm wanna explain? I'm curious.
Jehovah's Witnesses don't celebrate birthdays, for religious reasons.
That's ********. The origins are irrelevant; what's important is the purpose. Besides, birthdays have nothing to do with Christianity to begin with, nor should they.First, the modern american 'birthday' comes ENTIRELY from pagan religious rituals to various spirits and deities, and even if a christian name is put on the whole thing... a rose by any other name, right? That's actually our reason for not celebrating holidays. They're all pagan.
...how does that mean that the idea of a birthday is pagan, then?Anyway, secondly, there are only two examples of birthdays in the bible, and at both those occasions someone loyal to God was killed.
It's one bloody day in which everyone who care enough treats you special. Not having a special day means you have nothing to look forward to. It doesn't have to be giving from the heart, though it certainly can be, but that's not the point!It's not like our children suffer, anyway. Just because they don't get gifts on Christmas or their birthday doesn't mean they don't get gifts. I personally got things given to me on random days for absolutely no reason, and I think gifts actually mean more if they're given like that. On christmas and birthdays, everyone expects you to buy them something, and if you don't you're mean. That isn't giving from the heart, it's giving because you're expected to. But if you give just because you feel like it, it's special.
One of Pharaoh's servants who was helping Joseph out. And I can't start a thred. It's generally seen as a good idea not to start a discussion about religion online because it's so easy to lie online, although there is no rule about it. I only replied like I did because a question was asked.@Leeksoup:
Interesting, you should start a thread.
Anyways, I know John the Baptist was killed at Herod's birthday celebration; who was the other?
Maybe the origins are irrelevant to you; and that's EXACTLY my point. Brithdays have nothing to do with Christianity and everything to do with paganism and Babylonian (and Celtic, and Egyptian, etc etc) gods.That's ********. The origins are irrelevant; what's important is the purpose. Besides, birthdays have nothing to do with Christianity to begin with, nor should they.
Maybe the origins are irrelevant to you; and that's EXACTLY my point. Brithdays have nothing to do with Christianity and everything to do with paganism and Babylonian (and Celtic, and Egyptian, etc etc) gods.
No. It has nothing to do with Christianity, or any religion, for that matter. It's a friggin' birthday.Maybe the origins are irrelevant to you; and that's EXACTLY my point. Brithdays have nothing to do with Christianity and everything to do with paganism and Babylonian (and Celtic, and Egyptian, etc etc) gods.
One of Pharaoh's servants who was helping Joseph out. And I can't start a thred. It's generally seen as a good idea not to start a discussion about religion online because it's so easy to lie online, although there is no rule about it. I only replied like I did because a question was asked.
OK, That's something I didn't know.Jehovah's Witnesses don't use crosses either.
Sure is pagan alright. Good thing we Jehovah's Witnesses don't use a cross.Let's say that it's true that birthdays are totally a pagan idea but so was the cross. Or maybe I'm mistaken that hanging people on a cross to die a slow and painful deaths sounds very pagan to me yet this is the symbol use for Christianity.
Ok, But according to the Bible, God did. He use a curse (cursed is the man who hanged on a tree) to bless the whole world. He turns that which was evil for the good of all.Sure is pagan alright. Good thing we Jehovah's Witnesses don't use a cross.
You'll be dead and in eternal damnation, though. It's one or the other.I, personally, don't want to go to heaven, and the HUGE, crushing majority of us don't want to as well. We'd rather stay on Earth after Armageddon, when it is transformed into a paradise. The bible promises us a paradise Earth, and moreover an inhabited Earth, after Armageddon at least one hundred times.