Nor does it have anything to do with sacrificing goats, I imagine?
Sacrifice was different for Pagans than for Judeo-Christians.
Sacrifice appeased God/gods in both yes, but the ultimate purpose was 'an illustration' for the sacrifice of Christ.
So you believe, I love how religious people can easily and rationally point out why other religions are so stupid, but completely brainwash themselves when it comes to theirs.
Likewise how atheists perceive the world so rationally material...and yet purposefully blind themselves of the very spiritual world around them.
And what makes you think that?
Have you read some of the creation accounts of the pagan faiths?
And why is that incompatible with religion?
I didn't say it was incompatible.
For what if not your taste? And why not? How would you know?
My taste has nothing to do with how a spirit works, and how the universe works.
In the eastern faiths a soul's afterlife is bound to that of the universe, a universe that will eventually die all together. A spirit is immortal, it thus cannot be bound to a universe forever, if the universe will not thus be 'forever'.
I know because it is logically thus.
You're assuming that religions have to be christian to be religions. Therefore, the only religion is christianity! Surprise!
I assume first of all that these were religions of humanistic origin since they inherently based on human minds.
Where as the Abrahamic faiths seem to be of a much higher branch, Christianity (imo) being the highest of these, since it speaks of salvation as a gift, eternal purity and resolution that cannot be earned. Divine love at its fullest, as something that mortal hands cannot achieve, and an inheritance that is divinely described, a new creation, glorified bodies, and eternity unlimited.
Surprise surprise...that I would have come to the conclusion that Christianity IS the only 'true' religion. Since of all the faiths it is the most logical, the most divine, and answers most best the questions I gave it. I have put it to the test, and it has not failed me. I've prayed, I've been answered, I've gone through the ordeals, and I've set my hypothesis into a theory by these experiences.
The bad with the good. If you want to take credit at all, you have to take credit for both sides.
Why should the gardener have to take credit for the fault of the weeds, when he planted the flowers to do as he intended, the flowers thus doing as he ordained them to do?
The weeds will be removed in time. But the gardener has no obligation to answer for the weeds, if the flowers were his tools.
Remember however, that at one point all flowers were weeds, until the gardener decided to grow them to his purposes, and 'made them flowers'.
"Who decided that dandelions were weeds? Not I, I shall grow them, and make them beautiful."
If a program is designed to compress a file, and it works, do you not deserve credit for the program, or the compression of the file, if indeed that is what your intended design and purpose was for?
Should you get the blame then...if someone messes up your program, and turns it against what your purpose for the program was indeed? No..it is the fault of the hacker, and the program then.
But if you should creatively alter that hack into an awesome addition, then it is your credit for altering the hack from a bug, into a feature, and it is not the credit of the hacker because the feature then goes against the purpose the hacker put the bug in the program for.
Good job (A) you made this.
Good job (B) you broke (A)'s creation, and it has messed up (C)'s project.
Good job (A) you fixed it, and now it is also helping (C)'s project too. Again good job (A).