Home Forums Chat Forum So Jesus said to his disciples as he was nailed to the cross..

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  • So Jesus said to his disciples as he was nailed to the cross..
  • phoenixfromtheflame
    Free Member

    .. "none of you bastards touch my easter eggs, ill be back on sunday!"

    Made me chuckle.

    muddydwarf
    Free Member

    Depends whether they used Jewsons nails or not…. 😉

    ton
    Full Member

    8)

    phoenixfromtheflame
    Free Member

    Do you reckon that a modern day crucifixion would still result in stigmata, or do you think it'd be gotten rid of through the use of No More Nails?

    TijuanaTaxi
    Free Member

    Thought it was going to be the good old "I can see your house from here"

    breakneckspeed
    Free Member

    I can see the pub from here

    Edric64
    Free Member

    I'm fed up with being hammered by tacks(tax)

    bassspine
    Free Member

    "Hell of a way to spend a Friday night, but you get a
    great view of Jerusalem from up here"

    Kuco
    Full Member

    "Okay guys you win i'll stop doing the wine trick and buy a round like everyone else"

    westkipper
    Free Member

    This kind of talk reminds me of the Billy Connolly gag,
    Jesus walks in on the last supper, and the disciples are all eating a Chinese takeaway…
    "Whats all this?" he asks
    John replies " ahh, Judas decided to treat us all, he seems to have come into a bit of money…"
    ( I'd just like to get the apologies in , but I do have some very devout relatives who see the black humour in that one too)

    JoeBones
    Free Member

    Not funny

    Edric64
    Free Member

    Why is that not funny?

    Hairychested
    Free Member

    WK, that's just great!

    westkipper
    Free Member

    Nah, even I regret posting that one the minute I hit send, 'though it has been on tv a couple of times, so I thought the offense may be less,
    Sorry again.

    avdave2
    Full Member

    For phoenix

    Karinofnine
    Full Member

    Always look on the bright side of death…
    Just before you draw your terminal breath…
    'cos life's a piece of shit
    When you look at it

    etc

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    "Ow!"

    tyger
    Free Member

    I seem to remember that people mocked Him then also.

    The saddest part is He died just for people like you except you don't realise it …yet.

    I'll remember to mention you in my prayers.
    🙂 Happy Easter

    wors
    Full Member

    I seem to remember that people mocked Him then also.

    old ba$tard

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    So Jesus said to his disciples as he was nailed to the cross

    "go on then , where the **** is Jeremy Beadle?"

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    To the casual observer, the two aspects of Easter seem somewhat incongruous. On the one hand is the secular holiday, where children hunt for brightly colored eggs in the grass and receive candy and toys in baskets brought by an anthropomorphic rabbit. On the other hand is the religious observance, where the Christian faithful mark the miraculous resurrection of their savior. While the two sides seem to have nothing at all in common, they begin to make greater sense when one considers the pagan roots of the holiday.
    Fertility Goddesses

    The word Easter itself is likely derived from Eostre, the Saxon mother goddess, whose name in turn was adapted from Eastre, an ancient word for spring. The Norse equivalent of Eostre was the goddess Ostara, whose symbols were an egg and a hare, both denoting fertility. Festivals honoring these goddesses were celebrated on or around the vernal equinox, and even today, when Easter has supposedly been Christianized, the date of the holiday falls according to rather pagan reckonings, i.e. on the Sunday following the first full moon after the vernal equinox.
    Bunnies, Eggs and Lilies

    Rabbits, of course, are a potent symbol of fertility due to their prodigious output of young. Eggs, likewise, have always been considered representative of new life, fertility, and reincarnation. Painted eggs, thought to imitate the bright sunlight and gaily colored flowers of spring, have been used in rituals since the days of the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians. Lilies were also seen as fertility symbols because of their perceived resemblance to male genitalia. Even hot cross buns, associated with Lent, derive from the ancient Greeks and Romans, who baked “magic” wheat cakes with crosses scored in the top; two of these cakes were discovered in the ruins of Herculaneum, which was destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE.
    Roots of Resurrection

    The pagan celebrations most associated with modern Christian practices derive from Mediterranean cultures. The Phrygians celebrated a spring festival honoring Cybele, a fertility goddess. Cybele had a consort god named Attis, who was born of a virgin, and who died and was resurrected after three days, an occurrence commemorated sometime around the vernal equinox. Worshippers of Attis mourned the god’s death on Black Friday, then celebrated his rebirth on the following Sunday.

    Attis was simply the latest manifestation of earlier resurrection myths, like those of Osiris, Orpheus, Tammuz and Dionysus, who were likewise said to have been born of virgins and resurrected three days after their deaths. In areas where Christian beliefs later took hold, these already existing tales were grafted onto the story of Jesus Christ, and continue to be retold to this day. It seems that ever since the dawn of civilization, ancient peoples have always associated spring with rebirth and resurrection, with nature’s reawakening after the “death” of barren winter, and have further embodied the concept in the person of a god or goddess.

    Read more at Suite101: The Pagan Origins of Easter: Pre-Christian Rituals Form the Basis for Modern Celebrations

    tyger
    Free Member

    tazzymtb – part of what you write is correct, however, the evidence for Jesus's life, death and resurrection is overwhelming, historically as well as Biblically. It's whether you choose to believe He is the Son of God which is the real question – and that relies on faith, repentance and revelation.
    The whole Easter event is about God's love for all of us.

    wors
    Full Member

    Can you explain why christianity didn't come to our shores until 600 years after his death?

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    I won't argue on your special weekend about people coming back from the dead, have a jolly time, with your bearded zombie resurrection flesh eater.
    😉

    iDave
    Free Member

    tyger, what 'overwhelming historical evidence' is there of his resurrection?

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    shhhhhhh, don't upset him or the easter bunny won't bring nice pagan chocolate fertility eggs

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    Isn't it depressing that we are, as a species still a bunch of dumb superstitious monkeys, that will believe any old bollox

    wors
    Full Member

    Isn't it depressing that we are, as a species still a bunch of dumb superstitious monkeys, that will believe any old bollox

    i don't

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    😀

    Hairychested
    Free Member

    wors – Member

    Can you explain why christianity didn't come to our shores until 600 years after his death?
    The French ports were blocked by angry lorry drivers?

    wors
    Full Member

    The French ports were blocked by angry lorry drivers?

    😆 😆

    SaxonRider
    Free Member

    wors – Member
    Can you explain why christianity didn't come to our shores until 600 years after his death?

    [invitation to bu11sh1t brigade to shoot their mouths off]

    Not that it matters in any way as far as I can see, but Christianity was in Britain as early as the first half of the third century, and no later than the early fourth.

    **** he11, they need to instate history as an educational requisite in this country.

    The biggest problem with every one of these anti-religion threads that appear on this forum like a cancer, is how woefully uninformed they are.

    People strike out on here like Mexican children with piñata sticks on their birthday, blindly swinging and not caring who or what they hit. Come on. If you're really interested in challenging the status of historic religion, then take an OU class or two, and start dealing with what is instead of what you think is.

    [/invitation to bu11sh1t brigade to shoot their mouths off]

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    [invitation to saxonrider to put toys back in pram]

    calm down dear it's only a bike forum

    [invitation to saxonrider to put toys back in pram]

    wors
    Full Member

    Not that it matters in any way as far as I can see, but Christianity was in Britain as early as the first half of the third century, and no later than the early fourth.

    okay then it wasnt until around 600ad that it was taken serious, before then the people of Britain thought it was bolox

    john_drummer
    Free Member

    the evidence for Jesus's life, death and resurrection is overwhelming, historically

    really? as far as I remember, the Romans (who ruled what they called Judaea at the time) didn't say too much about him. Now, considering how anal they were about writing down everything so much as how many sacks of grain every small farmer sold at his local market, there are 2 possible answers to this:

    1) he never existed
    2) he was such a thorn in their sides they had to hush it all up

    your choice folks.

    While I'm open to the idea that there may or may not have been a preacher around at the time who annoyed the local powers somewhat, "son of god"?

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    people of Britain thought it was bolox

    some still do 😉

    wors
    Full Member

    I might start a thread about evolution!

    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    noooo it'll set the creationists off who will tell you that Mary went to bethlehem on the back of a triceretops!

    Kevevs
    Free Member

    It's just another reason for supermarkets to make a load of cash. shopping holliday. Who went shopping today?

    westkipper
    Free Member

    Having been a bad boy with my earlier contibution, and despite being in the hardcore sceptics club, I also dont really like the mocking tone of some of the religion threads. 😳
    I suspect that the bad things about religion are best challenged with a degree of respect and cold reason.
    So I'll spare you my other joke about Siddharta Gautama…

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 212 total)

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