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Goodnight John Boy! |
~ dyRic's Odyssey
"Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood." — Helen Keller
09 May 2015
26 December 2014
24 December 2014
07 January 2013
CHRISTMAS: THE OBVIOUS REVELRY OF SATURNALIA
Hoax!Hoax!Hoax!
Does it sound familiar? No it does not!How about Ho!Ho!Ho!? Yes indeed it does! And how about Santa Claus' coming to town!? Is "he/she" really coming?
Fleeting as it may seem, the particular familiar season called "Christmas" - as one of the celebrated holidays every year by most of those who profess or claim as Christians - has just passed two weeks ago since I wrote this article. Yet, facts of history plausibly proves that Dec. 25 was popularized as the date for Christmas not because Christ was born on that day, but because it was already popular in pagan religious celebrations as the birthday of the sun.
"Lacking any scriptural pointers to Jesus's birthday, early Christian teachers suggested dates all over the calendar. Clement . . . picked November 18. Hippolytus . . . figured Christ must have been born on a Wednesday . . . An anonymous document[,] believed to have been written in North Africa around A.D. 243, placed Jesus's birth on March 28" (Jeffery Sheler, U.S. News & World Report, "In Search of Christmas," Dec. 23, 1996, p. 58).
Does it sound familiar? No it does not!How about Ho!Ho!Ho!? Yes indeed it does! And how about Santa Claus' coming to town!? Is "he/she" really coming?
Fleeting as it may seem, the particular familiar season called "Christmas" - as one of the celebrated holidays every year by most of those who profess or claim as Christians - has just passed two weeks ago since I wrote this article. Yet, facts of history plausibly proves that Dec. 25 was popularized as the date for Christmas not because Christ was born on that day, but because it was already popular in pagan religious celebrations as the birthday of the sun.
"Lacking any scriptural pointers to Jesus's birthday, early Christian teachers suggested dates all over the calendar. Clement . . . picked November 18. Hippolytus . . . figured Christ must have been born on a Wednesday . . . An anonymous document[,] believed to have been written in North Africa around A.D. 243, placed Jesus's birth on March 28" (Jeffery Sheler, U.S. News & World Report, "In Search of Christmas," Dec. 23, 1996, p. 58).
The Bible does not encourage any sort of celebration of Christ's birth, and to the least, does not mention of Christmas. History records no such celebration until at least several centuries later, when the Catholic Church essentially adopted the pagan midwinter Saturnalia festival and the Dec. 25 celebration of the birthday of the pagan sun god Mithra as the supposed birthday of Jesus Christ in an effort to make Christianity more appealing to pagans.
Given the difficulties and the desire to bring pagans into Christianity, writes author William Walsh, "the important fact then which I have asked you to get clearly into your head is that the fixing of the date as December 25th was a compromise with paganism" (The Story of Santa Klaus, 1970, p. 62).
As its origin cannot be traced back to either the teachings or practices of the earliest Christians, the falsehood of the celebration is totally a significant departure from the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints (Jude 3).
A good question to ask is “Are we doing something that Jesus would do and that He would support?”
Given the difficulties and the desire to bring pagans into Christianity, writes author William Walsh, "the important fact then which I have asked you to get clearly into your head is that the fixing of the date as December 25th was a compromise with paganism" (The Story of Santa Klaus, 1970, p. 62).
As its origin cannot be traced back to either the teachings or practices of the earliest Christians, the falsehood of the celebration is totally a significant departure from the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints (Jude 3).
A good question to ask is “Are we doing something that Jesus would do and that He would support?”
04 September 2011
03 September 2011
THE OLYMPIC FIRE
Fire. Stolen from the gods by Prometheus. Brought down from Mount Olympus and given to the land of mortals, against the wishes of the enraged deities. Or so the old Grecian myth goes.
The Olympic flame is traditionally carried in a relay from runner to runner to the site of the Olympic games—a nod to the fanciful legend of Greece, where the Olympics originated. Today, when the last runner enters the stadium in Vancouver to light the Olympic cauldron, the flame will have completed a 106-day journey across Canada. The fire that remains burning for the duration of the games will trace its beginning all the way back to Greece, where it was ignited at the site of what was once the temple of Hera.

Two thousand years ago, another fire ignited. In the city of Jerusalem, one hundred and twenty disciples of Jesus Christ were gathered together on the Day of Pentecost when a mighty rushing wind filled the house and tongues of fire descended upon the heads of those there. Not stolen from the gods, but given freely by the one true God, this fire—God's Holy Spirit—started burning in the hearts of Christ's servants two millennia ago and has remained burning in His Church ever since.
Before His crucifixion and resurrection, Christ promised, "I will build my church, and the gates of Hades [the grave] shall not prevail against it" (Matthew 16:18, NKJV). True to His word, that Church has survived until our present day, and continues to function under His guidance.
Like the Olympic flame, God's Spirit has spread from individual to individual, country to country, continent to continent. It burns without interruption, without change, on its way to a sure and established goal. But unlike the Olympic flame, it enables those who carry it to have a direct, personal connection with their Creator, and to share His character. The Olympic flame is temporary; God's Spirit is eternal. The Olympic flame represents something stolen; God's Spirit represents a gift available to all who truly want it. The flame symbolizes all that is human nature; the Spirit contains all that is God.
Today, the cauldron will be lit, and the games will be underway. In a few more days, they will be finished, along with the Olympic flame. But the Spirit of the living God, carried for centuries by His people, will never be extinguished. They will continue marching toward their ultimate goal—a goal far greater than any Olympic cauldron.
01 September 2011
'SLOWLY, SLOWLY, CATCHEE MONKEY'

Naturally this took patience on the part of the captor who would have to wait quietly until the monkey was snared. Thus the slow approach proved to be more effective hence the phrase.
This is now used to describe that a slow and patient approach to a problem with careful thought is often better than rushing in.
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