ARCHIVE: Will You Be Celebrating Christmas?

ARCHIVE: Will You Be Celebrating Christmas?

  • Yes

    Votes: 87 81.3%
  • No

    Votes: 20 18.7%

  • Total voters
    107

Sozo

New member
Originally posted by granite1010

Sozo, get bent. I'm tired of your crap.
:chuckle:

I just wanted to know what you think a Christian is, since you claim to have been one.
 

philosophizer

New member
Hilston,

What about Christmas is ritualistic? Or ceremonial? It's not like there are any prescribed things that must be done in order to celebrate Christmas (well, maybe for catholics). I don't have to go out and slaughter a "clean animal" for Christmas dinner and do something funky with its blood. I don't have to offer grain or light candles. I don't have to put up a "Christmas tree." I don't have to buy presents. There are no rituals. It's not ceremonial. It just a day of observance and celebration. There is no set pattern of necessity to it. And no one has to do it if they don't want to.

If I do absolutely nothing this Saturday, am I sinning because I have kept the Sabbath? If I don't like pork, am I sinning by not eating it?
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by Yorzhik
Rom 14:22 Hast thou faith? have [it] to thyself before God. Happy [is] he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth.

Hilston, I promise not to celebrate Christmas around you, as you are the weaker brother who I don't want to offended.
Yorzhik, read it again. You have it exactly backward. The weaker brothers in the context of Romans were the Jews, those who necessarily observed special days and special food restrictions (sadly, much as modern evangelicals do, albeit NOT of necessity -- unwarrantedly and unbiblically) .

See verse 2: "For one believeth that he may eat all things: another, who is weak, eateth herbs."

It is the one who must, of dispensational necessity, observe religious ritual, ceremony and symbolism who is the weaker brother. This is why Paul so harshly condemns such things for the Body of Christ. Truly the lesser is blessed of the greater. The Body of Christ is greater than the lesser angelic realm, whom we bless and govern. The angelic realm is greater than the lesser Jewish kingdom, whom they bless and govern.

Paul wrote this at a time when believers from the Kingdom dispensation co-existed with believers of the Body dispensation. He therefore urged them to be kind and respectful to those sensibilities. Since there are no longer any elect Jews of the Kingdom alive today, Romans 14 cannot apply. This is also true of the entire 8th chapter of 1Corinthians.

In verse 3, Paul says, "Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not; and let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth: for God hath received him." He is making the point that the Jewish believer MUST have food restrictions and the Body believer is not to look down upon him for this.

In verse 5, Paul says, "One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind." Paul is not saying, "It's up to you, as long as you're fully convinced." No, he is saying that the weaker brother (the one who esteems one day above another) must make his hope and calling sure, that is, be sure he is NOT in the Body of Christ and that his hope is with elect Israel or the Nations.

Paul finishes this chapter with the sternest warning: "And he that doubteth is damned if he eat, because he eateth not of faith: for whatsoever is not of faith is sin." This is hardly saying it's a matter of preference or optional. Damnation is the result of not making one's calling and election sure. Are you called to be a Jew of the Nation of Israel? Are you called to be Gentile a proselyte of the Gate? Or are you called to be a member of the Body of Christ, which sits above the angelically attended ceremonies, rituals, symbolisms, food restrictions and holidays? Hint: The former two are not present options.

Originally posted by Yorzhik
You have made observing the anniversary of Jesus' birthday a law for yourself, and I wouldn't want to cause you to stumble because of it.
I have never said that was my motivation for abstaining from Christ-Mass, Yorzhik, and you should be ashamed of yourself for not rightly judging and for egregiously presuming to know my motives. Yorzhik, you're one of the few sharp thinking Open Theists I've encountered and I'm frankly disgusted that you would stoop to this.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Lighthouse writes:
When was the last time Christmas was really about Christ? There are people who choose to make it about Christ, but it isn't a religious observance.
You're missing the point, and contradicting yourself in the process. If you wanted to make the 4th of July into a day about Christ, that would be forbidden, too. Paul isn't limiting these commands to Jewish holydays, but man-made made-up ones as well. All religiously symbolic, ceremonial, ritualist behavior is condemned by Paul.

Lighthouse writes:
[It isn't a religious observance]. It isn't to me, even though I make it about Him.
If you "make it about Him," it becomes a religious observance, and you're separating yourself from Christ by doing that, regardless of what holiday you use as a religious observance.

Lighthouse writes:
And angels have nothing to do with it, except for the story about the angels who came to the shepherds.
They do indeed have very much to do with, except presently the holy angels are in abeyance. They have no mediatory ministry today as they did with Israel and the nations. So which angels do you think get involved with religious ceremony today, Lighthouse?

Hint: 1Co 11:14,15 " 14 And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of righteousness; whose end shall be according to their works."
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by Sozo

:chuckle:

I just wanted to know what you think a Christian is, since you claim to have been one.

We've been there and done that. I'd rather focus on Hilston and the other stuffed shirts who think Christmas is verboten...
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Julie21 writes:
The part of my Bible which seems to draw me each time when reading over your post, is 1Corinthians 1:10 -18.
Notice what Paul says in the passage you cite. He urges them to be of the same mind (1Co 1:10), united according to his Gospel (cf. Ro 2:16 16:25 2Ti 2:8), the unity of which is outlined in Eph 4:4-6. He has been informed of contentions between Jew/Gentile and Body saints and is writing to deal with those matters. Paul makes the point that, although he baptized some Jewish believers and Gentile converts (as it was fitting and required for him to do), he emphatically states "... Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: ..." He makes a distinction between HIS gospel (that of the risen Christ), which is non-ritualistic, and that of the earthly Jesus, Who did not separate baptism from the Jewish gospel (Mt. 28:19,20).

Julie21 writes:
After several days of reading over Paul's doctrines, I truly cannot agree that he states we who are in Christ are "forbidden" to celebrate Christ's birth.
If that is your conclusion, then will continue to separate yourself from Christ by observing this religious holiday.

Julie21 writes:
We are all 'free' in Christ, as Paul states, ...
That doesn't mean you are free to disobey the gospel, which is what you're doing if you celebrate Christ-Mass.

Julie21 writes:
... and as far as I can determine, no one can put themselves under the old Mosaic legalistic law, as it became defunct with the cross and the risen Christ.
As I indicated to Lighthouse, you can put yourself under the angelic realm by making anything into a religious ritual. If brushing your teeth became a time of special religious devotion for you, then you've made it into a ritual, putting yourself under the angelic realm and violated Paul's gospel.

By the way, the Mosaic Law was not legalistic, no more and no less than Paul's Law or Noah's Law. Furthermore, it was not "defunct" as the result of the cross and resurrection. Jesus continued to teach the Mosaic law AFTER His resurrection. In fact, He commanded His disciples to observe everything whatsoever He commanded them, included the sacrifices, sin offerings, spice tithes, food restrictions, etc. that He taught throughout His earthly ministry (Mt. 28:19,20 cf. Mt. 23:1-3).

Julie21 writes:
During the year, our church has many outreach programs to try and spread the gospel to the community surrounding us. At Christmas, we and other Churches in the nearby have various Christ -celebrating events that impact on the un-churched. If we were not to celebrate Christmas...that is the Birth of Christ,as opposed to the Santa Claus variety of Christmas, then how would it seem to those who do not know the Lord, yet know that we are Christ's children?
You're asking me how would it seem to un-churched people if churched people behave unbiblically? You're asking me to let the Christ-hating world be a reason for celebrating something that the Bible strictly forbids. What's wrong with this picture?

Julie21 writes:
As a fairly recent follower of Christ, as opposed to previously only 'knowing' about Him, I would have found it hypocritical to hear of a Christian who did not celebrate Christmas.
I won't let you or the "unchurched" world dictate to me how I should honor God's word. Just because the unsaved world thinks Christians should behave a certain way doesn't mean I should let that determine my behavior. The lie of Christ-Mass was manufactured by apostates to begin with, and for the world to now expect Christians to observe that day has nothing to do with what the Bible teaches.

Julie21 writes:
( not saying that to offend you, Jim, as I believe you to be a good Christian who has merely interpreted this area of scripture wrongly).
Show me my error. Show me how you are not severing yourself from your Head by celebrating religious holidays.

Julie21 writes:
I celebrate each of my children's births because each brought a sense of joy, love, and hope to my life. I celebrate my parent's birthdays, even now that they have long since gone, because without them, I would not be.
And if you do so as a religious exercise, it is contrary to the gospel and you are separating yourself from Christ.

Julie21 writes:
Without Christ's birth, there would have been no cross and no chance for my redemption. I celebrate Christ's birth on Christmas Day, for those same reasons mentioned above but to such a heightened degree that no words could ever tell ...
It's frightening. With Paul, I say "But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid [for] you, ..." (Gal 4:9-11).
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by philosophizer
What about Christmas is ritualistic?
It happens the same time every year. That is ritualistic. It involves the same symbolic behaviors year after year. That is ritualistic.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Or ceremonial?
If you're not literally expecting the Messiah to be re-born of a virgin on the winter solstice this year, then it's ceremonial only.

Originally posted by philosophizer
It's not like there are any prescribed things that must be done in order to celebrate Christmas (well, maybe for catholics).
There doesn't have to be. As long as you affix religious significance to it, you've violated Paul's gospel and have turned again "to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage ... Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years." Gal 4:9,10.

Originally posted by philosophizer
If I do absolutely nothing this Saturday, am I sinning because I have kept the Sabbath? If I don't like pork, am I sinning by not eating it?
No. Please go back and read my previous posts. Both of my male children are circumcised, but not for religious reasons or purposes. My church meets on Sundays, but the day itself is not religiously significant (as it is, say, for Sabbatarian Presbies or Seventh Day Adventists). If I said to my church, "Good morning. How are you all this fine Lord's Day?," jaws would drop, eyes would bug out and I would be taken aside and checked for dementia.
 

philosophizer

New member
Originally posted by Hilston

It happens the same time every year. That is ritualistic.
So if it was a different day/month/season every year, would it be okay?

It involves the same symbolic behaviors year after year. That is ritualistic.
Are there any "rituals?" Maybe some people do the exact same things every year for Christmas, making them into "rituals," but not everyone does. Not everyone has Christmas rituals.


If you're not literally expecting the Messiah to be re-born of a virgin on the winter solstice this year, then it's ceremonial only.
Ceremonial as in consisting of rituals.

Why can't I celebrate the birth of my Lord? I'm not talking rituals. I'm not talking ceremonies. I'm merely talking celebration.


There doesn't have to be. As long as you affix religious significance to it, you've violated Paul's gospel and have turned again "to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage ... Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years." Gal 4:9,10.
Yes. They felt they were required to observe special days.



No. Please go back and read my previous posts. Both of my male children are circumcised, but not for religious reasons or purposes.
Right. We are free to do so. Not slaves to its necessity.


My church meets on Sundays, but the day itself is not religiously significant (as it is, say, for Sabbatarian Presbies or Seventh Day Adventists).
Yes it is. I get the contrast you are drawing. Your church does not require worship on a specific day. But it has chosen to worship together on Sundays.

I understand that you do not apply the religious significance to the day itself. But you bring religious significance to the activity that you hold on that particular day. Like you said to lighthouse, you make it about Christ.

How is that different from choosing to celebrate Christmas? I don't apply religious significance to December 25th. I merely bring religious significance to my activities on that day.


If I said to my church, "Good morning. How are you all this fine Lord's Day?," jaws would drop, eyes would bug out and I would be taken aside and checked for dementia.
Right. You'd be saying that Sunday, in and of itself is Holy. A day can no more be holier than other days than a building can be holier than other buildings. Dec 25 is no more holier than any other date on the calandar.
 

Nathon Detroit

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
Originally posted by Hilston

It's possible. It's also possible that they're self-deluded or in denial.
It's also very possible that you are a flaming loon! :freak:

The possibilities are endless aren't they?

It says you're either not elect or you're self-deluded or in denial. I don't think you'll be able to stay that way permanently, if you are elect. It may depend on how much baggage someone has. It will eventually get to you. It may have to simmer a while.

Rome wasn't burnt in a day. :D
So how many are in the Body Jim.... 48?

Maybe a 100?

Maybe a thousand or so people out there who meet your bizarre criteria for salvation?

The gospel according to Jim....

Hilston 10:9 that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. Oh and you must not celebrate religious holidays..... errrrr....... well at the very least you must feel really guilty celebrating religious holidays.... THEN... and only then you will be saved.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by philosophizer
So if it was a different day/month/season every year, would it be okay?
No, because it would still be religiously symbolic and ceremonial. But we all know that would against the ceremonial, ritualistic grain of the sin nature, which rebels specifically against the gospel of this dispensation.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Are there any "rituals?" Maybe some people do the exact same things every year for Christmas, making them into "rituals," but not everyone does. Not everyone has Christmas rituals.
Sure they do. They follow a prescribed set of rules of behavior, all in the name of Christ. Setting up the tree is a rite. Going to Christ-Mass service is a rite. Buying gifts and cards is a rite. Setting aside a special day to celebrate an unbiblical holiday is a rite. Decorating yourselves and places and things with Christ-Mass adornments is religious symbolism. All of these are contrary to Paul's gospel.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Why can't I celebrate the birth of my Lord?
You can, as long as you do not do it ceremonially, ritualistically or symbolically. We are to celebrate His birth, His life, His death, His resurrection, and His special commission to Paul without ceasing. We are not to ritualize, ceremonialize these things. We are not to create symbolic representations for the sake of worship. We are not to set aside special times, special places, special symbols, or special clothing in order to worship. The Body of Christ is continually in worship, unlike Israel who had special time, special places, etc., and all this because the holy angels were inextricably involved in mediating that worship.

Originally posted by philosophizer
I'm not talking rituals. I'm not talking ceremonies. I'm merely talking celebration.
Then don't observe a special day with special ritualistic behavior and ceremonial symbolism. You can't say you don't do these things when you do.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Yes. They felt they were required to observe special days.
So as long as you don't view animal sacrifice as "required," it's OK to make a burnt offering unto the Lord?

Hilston wrote:
My church meets on Sundays, but the day itself is not religiously significant (as it is, say, for Sabbatarian Presbies or Seventh Day Adventists).


Originally posted by philosophizer
Yes it is. I get the contrast you are drawing. Your church does not require worship on a specific day. But it has chosen to worship together on Sundays.
First of all, we don't require worship ever. Nor do we have special worship times. We worship without ceasing. Furthermore, we are required by scripture to meet for fellowship and to study God's word, and so we choose to do it on a day that most people have free. Our meetings have no religious rituals, symbolisms or ceremonies, but we do have order, which is something the Lord emphatically commanded through Paul.

Originally posted by philosophizer
I understand that you do not apply the religious significance to the day itself. But you bring religious significance to the activity that you hold on that particular day. Like you said to lighthouse, you make it about Christ.
The day is not about Christ any more or any less than any other day of the week. We have to choose a day to meet for study, and that is the most convenient day.

Originally posted by philosophizer
How is that different from choosing to celebrate Christmas?
The Christ-Mass is unbiblical and prohibited by scripture. Believers gathering for study and edification is commanded by scripture.

Originally posted by philosophizer
I don't apply religious significance to December 25th. I merely bring religious significance to my activities on that day.
That's called a contradiction.

Hilston wrote:
If I said to my church, "Good morning. How are you all this fine Lord's Day?," jaws would drop, eyes would bug out and I would be taken aside and checked for dementia.


Originally posted by philosophizer
Right. You'd be saying that Sunday, in and of itself is Holy.
So are you telling me, by agreeing with what I've conveyed immediately above, that you've never called Sunday "The Lord's Day"?

Originally posted by philosophizer
A day can no more be holier than other days than a building can be holier than other buildings. Dec 25 is no more holier than any other date on the calandar.
While you may claim this, it is belied by the religious significance you bring to your activities on that day. And while you might wish to maintain that the day is no more holy and no more special than any other day, the vast majority of people in Christendumb say you're wrong.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by Knight

It's also very possible that you are a flaming loon! :freak:
It does no good to deny this, Knight. It doesn't help to call names either. The question is whether or not dispensational sins are serious. You seem to take them lightly. I don't and neither does scripture.

Originally posted by Knight
The possibilities are endless aren't they?
No. And the possibilities I've offered are biblical.

Originally posted by Knight
So how many are in the Body Jim.... 48? Maybe a 100? Maybe a thousand or so people out there who meet your bizarre criteria for salvation?
This shows that you're not thinking very carefully and you're responding emotionally rather than rationally. You've asked me my criterion for salvation elsewhere, Knight. You know full well that my only criterion is that Jesus Christ died in your behalf. That's it. If Jesus died for you, then you're saved. As to how many that includes, I have no idea. I don't go around declaring who is or who isn't saved. It isn't biblical to do so.
 

Nathon Detroit

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
Originally posted by Hilston

It does no good to deny this, Knight. It doesn't help to call names either. The question is whether or not dispensational sins are serious. You seem to take them lightly. I don't and neither does scripture.
Oh... don't be a big ol' baby. :baby: I was just teasin' you.

You continue...
No. And the possibilities I've offered are biblical.
I would contend that you haven't even come close to making a biblical case for your assertion.

This shows that you're not thinking very carefully and you're responding emotionally rather than rationally. You've asked me my criterion for salvation elsewhere, Knight. You know full well that my only criterion is that Jesus Christ died in your behalf. That's it. If Jesus died for you, then you're saved. As to how many that includes, I have no idea. I don't go around declaring who is or who isn't saved. It isn't biblical to do so.
But you also claimed that if I never feel guilty about celebrating Christmas then I am not part of the elect. :kookoo:

Jim... you are a legalist. You are attempting to put people under the bondage of imaginary laws that simply aren't there.
 

philosophizer

New member
Originally posted by Hilston
Sure they do. They follow a prescribed set of rules of behavior, all in the name of Christ. Setting up the tree is a rite. Going to Christ-Mass service is a rite. Buying gifts and cards is a rite. Setting aside a special day to celebrate an unbiblical holiday is a rite. Decorating yourselves and places and things with Christ-Mass adornments is religious symbolism. All of these are contrary to Paul's gospel.
No, you're generalizing. Christmas trees, cards, and decorations are things that some people do. Calling them a "rite" is wrong.


You can, as long as you do not do it ceremonially, ritualistically or symbolically. We are to celebrate His birth, His life, His death, His resurrection, and His special commission to Paul without ceasing. We are not to ritualize, ceremonialize these things. We are not to create symbolic representations for the sake of worship. We are not to set aside special times, special places, special symbols, or special clothing in order to worship. The Body of Christ is continually in worship, unlike Israel who had special time, special places, etc., and all this because the holy angels were inextricably involved in mediating that worship.
At what point does "celebration" become "ceremony?"

Hmm... Question for you. Do you consider crosses forbidden as well?


Then don't observe a special day with special ritualistic behavior and ceremonial symbolism. You can't say you don't do these things when you do.
Yup. I have a Christmas tree in my living room. It has several presents around it. And yes, on Christmas, I'm going to a family get together that we have every year. Gasp-- ritualistic behavior!

Okay, you've said that the Jews were required ceremonies of worship because they were not in the full connect of the Body of Christ, and their worship was mediated through angels. Their relationship with God was dependent upon those ceremonies. My relationship with God isn't dependant upon ceremonies. If I thought it did, the relationship would be a troubled one. That's what I see Paul saying.



So as long as you don't view animal sacrifice as "required," it's OK to make a burnt offering unto the Lord?
Sure. If I wanted to climb a mountain and grab a ram and sacrifice it to God, I could. So what?

I don't view the sabbath laws as required. But if I wanted to I could do absolutely nothing all Saturday long, would that be wrong? Should I be forbidden from doing no work that day? What if I, while I'm doing nothing, spend that time thinking about God? Should I be required to do at least one piece of work that day so I don't inadvertently "keep the sabbath?"


So are you telling me, by agreeing with what I've conveyed immediately above, that you've never called Sunday "The Lord's Day"?
Nope. I've never called Sunday "The Lord's Day." I have probably said "this is the day that the Lord has made" on a few Sundays. But I've said that on other days of the week too. What's your question about?



While you may claim this, it is belied by the religious significance you bring to your activities on that day. And while you might wish to maintain that the day is no more holy and no more special than any other day, the vast majority of people in Christendumb say you're wrong.
And, again, that's called generalizing. So what? I do say that no day is more holy than the next. But I also say that no day is exactly the same. Today is today. Yesterday I was a day younger. Tomorrow I'll be a day older. And so will everyone else on earth. Times change. The calandar revolves. One day there's snow on the ground; the next there isn't. What does it matter what Dec 25 looks like? It's not more holy than, say, June 17th. So what does it matter what people do on that day?

The only response is that Paul expressly forbid it. And I think you have a misunderstanding. I don't see it making sense along with everything else Paul said.
 

novice

Who is the stooge now?
Originally posted by philosophizer
I don't view the sabbath laws as required. But if I wanted to I could do absolutely nothing all Saturday long, would that be wrong? Should I be forbidden from doing no work that day? What if I, while I'm doing nothing, spend that time thinking about God? Should I be required to do at least one piece of work that day so I don't inadvertently "keep the sabbath?"
:darwinsm:
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by Knight
I would contend that you haven't even come close to making a biblical case for your assertion.
It's funny how this claim is made without (a) any counterarguments from scripture, or (b) any sound critique of the passages I've cited.

Originally posted by Knight
But you also claimed that if I never feel guilty about celebrating Christmas then I am not part of the elect. :kookoo:
You apparently have a very low view of God's dispensational laws and apparently put very little confidence in God's promise to work in us, both to will and to work for His good pleasure, and to bring to completion the good work He has begun in us. If you are elect, you will eventually experience discomfort about anti-Pauline behavior. That is the promise.

Originally posted by Knight
Jim... you are a legalist. You are attempting to put people under the bondage of imaginary laws that simply aren't there.
It is no more legalistic to prohibit religious holidays than it is to prohibit murder, dunkenness, water baptism or spice tithes. The laws are there. I've cited them over and over again. You prefer to ignore them or to irrationally explain them away as "dispensationally optional." That is because you apparently have a low view of God's Word and His commands for the Body of Christ.
 
Last edited:

Nathon Detroit

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
Originally posted by Hilston

It's funny how this claim is made without (a) any counterarguments from scripture, or (b) any sound critique of the passages I've cited.
Counter what????

You have no compelling biblical argument! How can I counter what isn't there?

The gospel of Jim is bankrupt.

On a side note....

Jim are you the guy who told me several years back that you don't have church every Sunday to avoid church becoming a ritual? I can't remember now if that was you or someone else. I apologize in advance if that wasn't you.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by philosophizer

No, you're generalizing. Christmas trees, cards, and decorations are things that some people do. Calling them a "rite" is wrong.
My generalizations are generally true. The fact that you observe a special religious day, Christ-Mass Day, and bring religious significance to your activities on that day suffice to condemn your behavior as anti-Biblical and dividing against the Body of Christ.

Originally posted by philosophizer
At what point does "celebration" become "ceremony?"
There's nothing wrong with either one until they become religious. The appropriate question is: "At what point do celebrations or ceremonies become religious?"

Originally posted by philosophizer
Hmm... Question for you. Do you consider crosses forbidden as well?
Absolutely! Religious symbols are strictly forbidden by scripture for the Body of Christ.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Yup. I have a Christmas tree in my living room. It has several presents around it. And yes, on Christmas, I'm going to a family get together that we have every year. Gasp-- ritualistic behavior!
In so doing, you separate yourself from Christ and violate God's commands for this dispensation.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Okay, you've said that the Jews were required ceremonies of worship because they were not in the full connect of the Body of Christ, and their worship was mediated through angels. Their relationship with God was dependent upon those ceremonies. My relationship with God isn't dependant upon ceremonies.
And that's because God has chosen the Body of Christ to sit above angels, above earthly ceremony. That's why Paul equates religious ceremony, ritual and symbolic behavior as angel worship in Colossians 2.

Originally posted by philosophizer
If I thought it did, the relationship would be a troubled one. That's what I see Paul saying.
He is saying that, and part of what he is saying is do not do these things; do not take from scripture what belongs to Israel and the nations.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Sure. If I wanted to climb a mountain and grab a ram and sacrifice it to God, I could. So what?
So what? :noway: It's a shadow that belongs to Israel, not to the Body of Christ. The Lord, through Paul's writings, gives emphatic prohibitions against this and all you can say is "so what"? Sheesh.

Originally posted by philosophizer
I don't view the sabbath laws as required. But if I wanted to I could do absolutely nothing all Saturday long, would that be wrong? Should I be forbidden from doing no work that day? What if I, while I'm doing nothing, spend that time thinking about God? Should I be required to do at least one piece of work that day so I don't inadvertently "keep the sabbath?"
After all this, you're still without a clue, aren't you? If you "do nothing", abstain from work and spend time thinking about God for religious reasons, then it's forbidden. If you do these things with the intent to adhere to a religious prescription, whether self-imposed or not, then it's forbidden. If you happen to do these things with no regard to any religious directive, then it's perfectly fine.

Originally posted by philosophizer
Nope. I've never called Sunday "The Lord's Day."
Do you have any objection to calling Sunday "The Lord's day"? If so, why? If not, why not?

Originally posted by philosophizer
And, again, that's called generalizing. So what? I do say that no day is more holy than the next.
If you celebrate Christ-Mass, you contradict your claim. It's that simple.

Originally posted by philosophizer
So what does it matter what people do on that day?
It matters to them. It matters to you. This entire discussion proves that.

Originally posted by philosophizer
The only response is that Paul expressly forbid it. And I think you have a misunderstanding. I don't see it making sense along with everything else Paul said.
Saying so doesn't make it so. Prove your assertions. For you to participate in Christ-Mass is no different than participating in a Passover Hagaddah or a Ramadan observance or a druidic winter solstice celebration. It's all forbidden by Scripture to the Body of Christ. You trample underfoot the special place given to the Body of Christ by behaving contrary to the position we've been given. That is why Paul is so emphatic when he warns the Galatians about having turned again "to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage ... Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years." Gal 4:9,10. He had grave fear concerning them. I have the same for you. Knight would call Paul a legalist for that concern. You would accuse Paul of generalizing.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by Knight
Counter what????

You have no compelling biblical argument! How can I counter what isn't there?
Show me the weakness of the argument. Show where I've misinterpreted scripture. Show where I've violated the context. It's the easiest thing in the world to provide counter arguments to non-compelling claims. If that's all it took to show the superiority of one's view, there would be no debates. Both sides would just stipulate: "Your argument is not compelling." At least respect the debate, Knight. A lack of counterargument is evidence that your protests are inane.

Originally posted by Knight
The gospel of Jim is bankrupt.
It's not my gospel, Knight. It's Christ's as given to Paul, and it will judge you if you refuse to repent (Ro 2:16).

Originally posted by Knight
On a side note....

Jim are you the guy who told me several years back that you don't have church every Sunday to avoid church becoming a ritual? I can't remember now if that was you or someone else. I apologize in advance if that wasn't you.
It wasn't me. That would be silly.
 

philosophizer

New member
Originally posted by Hilston
After all this, you're still without a clue, aren't you? If you "do nothing", abstain from work and spend time thinking about God for religious reasons, then it's forbidden. If you do these things with the intent to adhere to a religious prescription, whether self-imposed or not, then it's forbidden. If you happen to do these things with no regard to any religious directive, then it's perfectly fine.

You said: "If you happen to do these things with no regard to any religious directive, then it's perfectly fine."

I don't. I don't celebrate Christmas because of or as part of a religious directive. Only people who think Dec 25 is "more holy" do that. I just do it because I want to.


Do you have any objection to calling Sunday "The Lord's day"? If so, why? If not, why not?
No objection. Sunday is "The Lord's day." As is Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, etc. I've just never called it that because that's a rather silly truism.
 

Hilston

Active member
Hall of Fame
Originally posted by philosophizer

You said: "If you happen to do these things with no regard to any religious directive, then it's perfectly fine."

I don't. I don't celebrate Christmas because of or as part of a religious directive. Only people who think Dec 25 is "more holy" do that. I just do it because I want to.
It is implied in the behavior itself. That's like saying "I offer blood sacrifices to God, but not as a religious directive", or "I offer sacrifices to idols, but not as part of a religious directive," or "I pray to Dagon, but not as a religious directive." The only way to repudiate religious ceremonial, ritualistic or symbolic activity is to eschew it completely, just as Paul instructs throughout his epistles.
 
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