The Hidden Mysteries of Christmas Unveiled
Top Comments
All Comments (116)
-
@LifeLibertyLove I believe thats Cathar thought.
-
Very informative and TRUE.
I grew up in central europe in the 80's and remember mushroom decorations in the xmas trees
-
@camnads69 or you will find out that youre wrong and everything in our culture was to brainwash you not to believe. noone knows until then, so there is no point in you trying to preach us your bullshit
-
@LifeLibertyLove how could the world be an illusion, you must be crazy.
-
@BG2071 You can say I look foolish all you want. GnosticMedia and it's sources are presenting inaccurate information and conclusions which are completely original and new. It is one thing to say this is a new idea and it is another thing to say something exists in antiquity when it actually does not. You look foolish in my eyes for no critically thinking and demanding evidence.
-
@LifeLibertyLove You're looking really foolish on here...
-
@GnosticMedia None of the Gnostics I have studied believe Jesus' physical body was an illusion. That is a false claim made by the church fathers. The Gospel of Philip says Jesus is not an illusion the world is an illusion. As "false" the gnostics thought Jesus body was is as false as they thought the world was.
-
@LifeLibertyLove I love your contradictions: They "never believed in a physical Jesus", they "didn't believe he was human". Uh, that's exactly my point! See my last post on the DEFINITION of Docetae / Docetism.
I'm not going to sit here and sling ad hominems at you. You're clearly reacting emotionally because you're attempting to defend your beliefs - so you have an agenda to protect, because if you're wrong you believe you'll be a fool. Gnostics generally believed that YOU are 1 with god.
-
@LifeLibertyLove Google on the Docetae: (from the Greek δοκέω dokeō, "to seem") is the belief that Jesus' physical body was an illusion, as was his crucifixion; that is, Jesus only seemed to have a physical body and to physically die, but in reality he was incorporeal, a pure spirit, and hence could not physically die. This belief treats the sentence "the Word was made Flesh" (John 1:14) as merely figurative. Docetism has historically been regarded as heretical by most Christian theologians.
This is a fascinating commentary on what may be the origins of some of our Christmas customs. Thanks for making this available.
Tigerpaws9097826 2 years ago 3
@babyzach2012 That has NOTHING to do with the mushrooms, but your own lack of critical thinking. Use the Trivium method, posted on my page, to gain an understanding of how these type of manipulations work against people.
GnosticMedia 1 year ago 2