For those who don’t know, Kuya Kim is a Filipino television host best known for his trivia shows. In this reel, he said that Sunday had pagan roots but incorrectly stated that it is the Sabbath day, the seventh day of the week, quoting Exodus 20:8. Click here for the video transcript.
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Nativity Scene Could Offend Muslims, Priest Says
“A priest in Italy has caused uproar after announcing there would be no Christmas nativity scene at the local cemetery this year because it could offend Muslims and atheists. Fr Sante Braggiè said there would be no crib in the cemetery in the northern city of Cremona because it may anger people of others faiths or none whose relatives are buried there. …The local chief of the conservative Lega Nord, Pietro Burgazzi, also said: “I hope the decision not to put up a crib was not ideological, but hearing the criticisms it seems that it was.” –Source
It amazes me to no end how quick Roman Catholic priests are to bow down to Satan in refusing to share Jesus with anyone outside the Catholic church. Now, before you email me with eyebrows still firmly raised in surprise, no I am not declaring the Roman Catholic church is a Christian church. I have overwhelming evidence on more than 12,000 pages (if printed) of this website that it is by no means a Christian church. (Sorry Mr & Mrs Catholic, there’s just no easy way to say that) And no I am not saying Christmas is a Christian holy-day either. As many already know, I have a ton of evidence that Christmas is 100% Pagan. Just looking at the picture on the left with the Pagan stained glass window in the so called stable shows it promotes Paganism. I mean seriously, when was the last time anyone saw a window, let alone a stained glass window in a stable? It was placed there for a reason. (See more about Paganism in the church of Rome here) Continue reading
Why Thousands Of Pagans Are Standing Up For The Environment
In the months leading up to last year’s Earth Day, a group of roughly 50 pagans gathered in a closed Facebook group to draft a collective call to action. On April 22, 2015, they published the “Pagan Community Statement on the Environment,” which framed climate change as a global moral dilemma to which pagans and other people of faith must respond…
“There are Witches, Wiccans, Druids, Shamans, Goddess Worshipers, Pantheists, Animists, Humanistic Pagans, Atheistic Pagans, Heathens, Polytheists, Reconstctionists, Buddho-Pagans, Christo-Pagans, Quaker Pagans, Unitarian Universalist Pagans, and many more,” Halstead told The Huffington Post…
“Speaking in harmony does not mean everyone being of one mind or agreeing on every point,” Halstead said. “It means temporarily setting aside our egos and prioritizing our individual disagreements when a collective voice is urgently needed, as it is now.”
“I hope that this helps demonstrate to the interfaith activist community that Pagans are serious and worthy partners in the fight to turn the tide of global climate change. Source