I think there will be many here who will be surprised to discover that their belief in the Trinity is a man-made tradition that was accepted from a pagan religion.Imagican said:Oh, and for those that DON'T understand what I am refering to here:
Christmas celibrations
Easter
The carved statues and crosses
'trinity'
'tradition' such as these were NOT offered by Christ or His apostles yet are ACCEPTED as IF THEY WERE. Carved idols came NOT from Christ or God but from PREVIOUS pagan religions. Christmas was a celibration of the ROMANS called Saturnalia that was 'transformed' into Christ's Mass in order to APPEASE the people that may have simply rejected the 'new religion' that ELIMINATED their FAVORITE Holiday of the year. Rabits, colored eggs? Come on. And there is MUCH indication that a 'trinity' existed in Mithraism. And we KNOW that there was NO 'trinity' offered by Christ NOR His apostles or ANYONE ELSE until WELL after the death of Christ.
MEC
Paul warned the Gentiles about returning to their pagan gods. He did not say that any symbol or tradition they had was in itself evil. In fact, James states that "It is my judgment, therefore, that we should not make it difficult for the Gentiles who are turning to God. Instead we should write to them, telling them to abstain from food polluted by idols, from sexual immorality, from the meat of strangled animals and from blood. " Pretty limited set of instructions, don't you think? Not that every aspect of your culture is 'intrinisically evil' and you must completely abandon all of it.
This is why when the battles between Christianity and paganism were at their height, the Christian church addressed many of these things head-on. None was more obvious than the setting of the date to celebrate the birth of Christ to directly compete with the most prolific pagan holiday. "Compete" with, not "Merge" with. This is very similar to what you see happening with many churches today with offering an alternative to Halloween by hosting a "Fall Carnival" that maintains a lot of the positive traditions (costumes that are benign, candy, treats, and fun) while rejecting the darker traditions and underlying meaning. I assume you would think there is a problem with that?
A symbol in and of itself is nothing. Its only importance is the meaning it has for those who incorporate it into their religious practice or general life. This is why a Christian woman who chooses to wear a cross necklace (a carved image out of gold or silver or whatever) has no ties to the Egyptian cross symbol and its meaning that pre-dated Christ. It rather serves as a reminder to herself and a witness to others of what that symbol represents to her -- the sacrifice of Christ on the cross for the sake of the redemption of her soul. To strip our lives of all religious symbols because of what they may have meant to somebody else thousands of years ago gives them more power than they are due, and denies us of the ability to incorporate physical reminders and witnesses of our Christian life to others.