conversationpc wrote:I don't care what people once believed.
This is the problem.
Do you NOT recognize that what YOU believe TODAY is part of a collective consciousness that will surely be considered ignorant/quaint within a generation or two...?
THAT was my point.
I love the story Joseph Campbell tells about the little school boy that came into a lunch counter where he frequented. The little boy came in and sat with his mother. He said that he had written a paper about the evolution of man but that the teacher corrected him that Adam and Eve were the first humans and that we are all descendents of them. He said to her, "Yes, I know - but this is a scientific paper."

A woman sitting next to the boy overheard him and said, "You're teacher was right - evolution is just a theory." The little boy was up to that, too and said, "Well, yes but it's been factualized - they found the bones."
So let's talk about Santa Claus. Yes - he's based upon Saint Nicholas. No querstion. However, Saint Nicholas was morphed into some fat, jolly, MAGICAL man who whips around the world on a sleight with flying reindeer landing on rooftops and slipping down chimneys with a wink and a nod. The REAL Saint Nicholas merely left baskets of food at the doors of needy people!
So if you want to say that Santa Claus is based upon a real person but that things just got blown out of proportion then the question about Jesus MUST also be asked:
If Jesus truly did exist - did his life get blown out of proportion like Saint Nicholas'?
I suppose the answer would be "No" because what was recorded about Jesus was done so nearly about the time that he lived although there was sufficient time for things to get stretched. But maybe the answer is "Yes".
When I was a kid there were times when we couldn't afford soda so my mother would prepare Kool-Aid and pour it out and say, "Here's some strawberry soda - just make believe that there are bubbles." In a "magical" kind of way she turned Kool-Aid into red pop! So let's look at Jesus' "miracle" of turning water into wine. My dad was an alcoholic so I never understood how turning something pure as water into wine was seen as a miracle! When I read that story I think back to my mother and Kool-Aid. The tradition in Jesus' day was to drink wine at weddings - so much so that it was a real social/traditional slight not to. Well, in this story there was no wine to be had so Jesus poured water and out flowed wine. Or did it? Well, my mother poured Kool-Aid out as strawberry soda so maybe Jesus simply defied tradition and poured out water with the attitude of "Hey - too bad. This water will have to do - just make believe." Magically turning water into wine makes no sense to me. Who was Jesus - the first Houdini? No. He simply made do with what was available despite all of the social and traditional demands. In fact, he was a rebel and defied many traditions. So is the story about Jesus' "magical God-like" powers or is it about making do with what you have despite what the immediate demands are?
I don't believe Jesus truly turned water into wine any more than Saint Nicholas flew down chimneys with a wink and a nod.
Darwin flushed #3 down the toilet.
[quote="conversationpc]Evolutionary so-called science has undergone more changes than the traditions you keep slamming Christianity with. You seem to have quite a bit of faith in evolution despite its many flaws yet you continually flog Christians who "perpetuate the old traditions".[/quote]
Of course, it has! Considering, it's still something of a new discovery. We're learning new things all the time. Recently it was discovered that red-haired people are very likely to have Neanderthal ancestory. I posted this here not too long ago. It's fascinating stuff - and we've found the bones!
I love the riddle of Adam and Eve:
An archeologist was digging in the Arctic ice and came upon the bodies of a man and a woman. Both bodies were completely naked and perfectly preserved. No other objects were around them. Despite all lack of evidence the archeologist took one look and proclaimed, "I've discovered Adam and Eve!" How did he know?
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Neither body had a belly button.