- Joined
- Apr 17, 2015
I bet Jesus played a Bard.
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Been a while since I've visited this thread, but I thought I would add in some recent crazy I listened to. At least, I think it is. The reasoning is off-the-wall.
So about a month or so ago I had to go to a sermon since afterwards we were going to head up to my mother's for my niece's first birthday. It started out semi-reasonably enough, with their "give in not to temptation" lessons (albeit it used Solomon as an example and as a result had very unsubtle implications that the evil wimminz Solomon married made him do ungodly things -- and maybe one sentence of saying "Solomon was also a grown man and responsible for his own actions" but I digress). Anyway, they talked about how some sins are dressed up to not look so bad, six ways I believe (though I can't remember all six since I tuned it out after it started getting extremely guilt-trippy and just plain out there with the logic).
Let's seeeee....
(Can't remember what the last two are since, like I said, I tuned them out after.)
- Drinking alcohol is bad because it makes you do evil, sinful things.
- Moderation in general is evil because it makes you think something isn't so bad now.
- Cohabitation is evil even if you're engaged to marry the other person because an unmarried man and woman will do sinful things without exception.
- Money is evil, even when you actually need it. It makes you go into sinful professions, according to them. There was also one example the preacher used that stood out to me: a bartender is, according to them, responsible for his buddy dying from drunk driving since he continued to have that job because he needed the money.
Honestly, I wasn't even sure if what I was hearing is real. lol The second and fourth ones were really eyebrow-raising for me, and for the third the preacher even went ahead and shot down arguments about a couple living together because of how bad the economy has been and that it's more affordable to live together.
Surprisingly, they didn't pass a plate around, though I guess that's because it was an evening sermon.When they passed the collection plate around, I wonder if anyone refused and said "Money is evil!"
Would there be any that walked out or thought the pastor was crazy? Really, I can understand money being evil in a way but even then, there times when we need it. Even then, the evil thing would be more towards greed than just having some paper bill that was given some sort of set value. As for that fourth one, I can't help but wonder if the pastor has something against alcohol because his friend died from drunk driving (unless he mean't the man that was his friend is "dead" because the man was a bartender).Surprisingly, they didn't pass a plate around, though I guess that's because it was an evening sermon.
Still, I wonder how they'd handle that, or if they even do it.
While it was just a made-up example (as far as I know) and not about himself, he really had something against alcohol. He (like my grandmother) seemed to be of the mind that just one drop means you're an alcoholic.Would there be any that walked out or thought the pastor was crazy? Really, I can understand money being evil in a way but even then, there times when we need it. Even then, the evil thing would be more towards greed than just having some paper bill that was given some sort of set value. As for that fourth one, I can't help but wonder if the pastor has something against alcohol because his friend died from drunk driving (unless he mean't the man that was his friend is "dead" because the man was a bartender).
The second pastor of my church recalled a story from his past. The guy uses a wheelchair since before he was a pastor (I can assume it was when he was in college, perhaps long before that. He speaks with a slur and his posture isn't like the others). When a televangelist was nearby, doing his show, there was a line of people wanting to get healed and such like you'd see with all these other TV evangelist. My pastor was in line and ready to go in but he was stopped by the staff. The staff said he wasn't the right kind of person they wanted, considering that he was in a wheelchair, had a bit of a slur, and didn't have the same structure of standing and moving like everyone else. Needless to say, my pastor wasn't happy with that. It can go to show one how crazy and/or crazy the televangelist are.
Indeed, with what he has (the pastor I have who uses a wheelchair), no doubt the televangelist would be torn to shreds when the people see that he wasn't able to "lay God's healing grace" on the wheelchair pastor I have. Since one also has to consider the ruthless selection, would it also be possible they might use a plant that would go along with their scam?I can tell you exactly why he was turned away.
Those 'healing touch' things depend on people who can leap up in 'holiness' or whatever after being fondled by a skeezy pastor in a $2500 suit. The illusion depends on this to work. For this reason, anybody being televised is ruthlessly selective in who they pick for 'laying of the hands'. No amputees, no major deformities. No paraplegics. No one is allowed up who looks like they would be unable to jump from their walker or wheelchair and leap about like a stoned ballerina. In the case of your pastor, he was in a wheelchair AND had somewhat unusual posture AND a speech impediment, all of which point to a possible lifelong problem or brain damage, which would make it impossible for him to get up after being blown by the Holy Spirit, or whatever it is that happens during those shows.
Teal Deer: televangelists only 'lay hands' on sick people who aren't actually too sick to walk, otherwise their illusion won't work.
Sauce: I'm psychic.
Back in the day, I remember seeing a painting (that I can't find for love nor money, fuckity fuckkit) with a bit of doggerel verse below it that always stuck with me, even when I was at the height of my "raised in a Christian cult" days. It was a painting called (I think) "Fleecing the Shepherd," and it depicted a pair of Old West train robbers busily emptying the pockets of a rather well-off traveling preacher. Beneath the painting, the artist had written:Money is evil, even when you actually need it. It makes you go into sinful professions, according to them. There was also one example the preacher used that stood out to me: a bartender is, according to them, responsible for his buddy dying from drunk driving since he continued to have that job because he needed the money.
Indeed, with what he has (the pastor I have who uses a wheelchair), no doubt the televangelist would be torn to shreds when the people see that he wasn't able to "lay God's healing grace" on the wheelchair pastor I have. Since one also has to consider the ruthless selection, would it also be possible they might use a plant that would go along with their scam?
We have one of those in town. They have good yogurt and aren't in your face, so I don't give too much of a shit about the acronym.I dunno if this counts but there is now a franchise chain of Christian froyo shops of all things. They are called Sweet Frog where FROG stands for "Fully Rely On God." http://sweetfrogyogurt.com/about
I was disappointed, even though I knew John was a fundie Christian. He was very intelligent and well-spoken, but he insisted on clinging like a desperate barnacle to things he must have been smart enough to understand couldn't have been true.