kellinator: (arrr!!)
[personal profile] kellinator
Dear Everyone Who's Whining About What a Terrible Man St. Patrick Was and How Pagans Are So Oppressed,

I was looking forward to an evening of St. Patrick's Day fun with friends, so forgive me for being a little bit cranky about all the vitriol being launched on here today.

Are we Christians supposed to spend the day apologizing for St. Patrick converting Ireland fifteen hundred years ago? I'm no expert in Druidic practices, but how do we really know that the Druids were happy-love-everybody people and St. Patrick was a jerk determined to make sure no one was having a good time? It's not as simple as pagans good/Patrick bad (nor, I suppose, as simple as Patrick good/pagans bad). Imagine you're the person who got picked for the human sacrifice and see if you still think so.

Christianity is not all about hate and oppression, no matter what Jerry Falwell tells you. It's got some good ideas about kindness to one's fellow man. Many terrible sins have been committed in the name of Christ, but much good has been done too.

A lot of people out there seem to demand toleration for everyone but Christians. I almost didn't make this post because I knew it would piss people off, but that would be denying what I feel and what I believe. If it's okay for you to express your faith, then it's okay for me to express mine. I may be a lousy excuse for a Christian, but I still am one. If you want religious toleration, I think that's terrific, but you ought to have some for the Christians too. We progressive Christians have got enough to worry about with retaking our faith from the Pharisees currently in charge without having to constantly apologize for being Christian.

And I'm fucking terrified of snakes, so St. Patrick, you're okay in my book.

Date: 2005-03-17 09:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kellinator.livejournal.com
You didn't really think I'd post something that inflammatory without fact-checking it, did you?

http://www.digitalmedievalist.com/faqs/sacrific.html

I'm not referring to anything the Romans, the Christians, or my mom said. I'm going strictly on the archaeological evidence.

Date: 2005-03-17 10:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pokeyturtle.livejournal.com
it looks like they fell into two classes: willing sacrifice, and the death penalty.

let's not forget the christian penchant for executing those who broke certain laws, either. or what were those stakes and gallows for?

(by the way, there are other interpretations for the cauldron scenes they cite. the official neopagan party line seems to be that the cauldron is a symbol for rebirth. dunno.)

Date: 2005-03-17 10:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flewellyn.livejournal.com
Many of the practitioners of human sacrifice viewed the victim as undergoing a kind of rebirth. So, really, that doesn't contradict the evidence. :-)

Date: 2005-03-18 02:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pokeyturtle.livejournal.com
just because i don't like your lil' lj friend doesn't mean i'm talking out my ass about everything.

what i should have added and didn't 'cause this has been one long day of distraction-by-baby (she's going through a growth spurt and wants to eat constantly) is, that scene on the gundestrup cauldron may have been souls going into a cauldron rather than living human beings.

i don't know. neither does the guy who wrote the article. neither do you.

thing is, i'm just as annoyed by the folks who think st. patrick Enlightened The Emerald Isle as [livejournal.com profile] kellinator is by the folks who think he was Teh Ev0l. for pete's sake, the celts had the most gender-equal society in that particular time period. and they had knowledge that surpassed anything the christians could muster up during the dark ages. and then they all became catholic, and... poof.

i just keep seeing that pattern, and not just in llewellyn books, half of which subject matter is made up anyway. but seriously. the vast majority of the technological advancement the west has made has come from secular thought, not religious. as for everyone else... being converted to one of the book religions has usually led to a degeneration in the culture, and a worsening of the people's lot in life. i want to believe this is because the ones doing the converting had a vested interest in keeping their converts poor and enslaved... but you still can't dispute that converting EVERYBODY to abrahamic religion reduces spiritual diversity in this world, with a concurrent loss of language, art, and perspectives which teach us something about the world we live in.

basically i just wish the Big Three would learn their lesson and leave the rest of us the fuck alone, and quit complaining when we get mad because they haven't.

it isn't like non-christians only hate christians (when they do; not all of us do) Just Because They're Christian. this isn't like hating black people because they're black. there's a longstanding pattern of bad behavior that we've all noticed, and of which some of us have been victims. i understand not all christians are guilty of that bad behavior. i just find it ironic that people of the abrahamic religions tend to self-police and purge people who are good, who bring positive changes to their faiths, but when someone's acting like an asshole and misrepresenting the faith that way? oh, we'll just make excuses and say "we're not ALL like that" and let the fuckers get away with it. when are y'all gonna burn fred phelps and jerry fartwell and Pat ROBert$on at the stake? priorities, people! priorities!

p.s. i LOVE the story about st. patrick teaching the irish about the trinity using a shamrock. funny, last i checked the irish celts not only understood the concept of a trinity, they worshipped several of their deities in that form. *shrug*

Date: 2005-03-18 03:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flewellyn.livejournal.com
Well...you may not be talking out of your ass about everything, but THAT was the most content-free rant I've read in a good while. Vituperative, pointless, rambling, and not even on topic.

I nominate you for an Asbestos Cork award.

Date: 2005-03-18 07:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] piratejenny.livejournal.com
Actually, Irish Catholicism was quite equal in terms of gender. There were monasteries that housed entire families. Many other differences as well. It was the Synod of Whitby that started codifying things and made the Irish Church conform to the Roman Church. And that was approved by an Anglo-Saxon king.

And honestly, I've met many more Pagans who hate Christians because of their religion that the other way around. And yes, just because of their religion. It's why I stayed away from any organized group for years. And I find it extremely hypocritical. It's inherent in the big three religions that there's one way. Too many Pagans claim not to believe this, but when it comes down to it, it's "oh, I feel sorry for x, because s/he's Christian and doesn't understand." Yet a religion, according to them (Pagans), shouldn't determine how you feel about someone.

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