Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 On 8/20/2011 at 9:28 AM, Smiley73 said: ^lolz, hide! that might be my favourite question ever don't know why you'd hide. i wouldn't.
Smiley73 Posted August 20, 2011 Author Posted August 20, 2011 Jew + muslim = BOOM? which was why I called hide, but hpw is yom kippur I mean you do sleep part of the day away, but 25 hours is a long time
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 i actually gave up on most of the tenets, and my health would preclude the fasting at this point. but yeah, it's a long fast. the all day fasts are long. no food, no water, no bathing, no wearing leather, and one other no no. observant people spend most of the evening and day in shul. in my old neighborhood they used to give the kids under 13 bags of candy, and let them run around crazy outside the shul all day. i think it was fun, but iw asn't one of them. it looked like fun. i don't boom nobody. jew + muslim = quite closely related, actually. which probably explains a lot of the BOOM. but shouldn't.
eclipse0 Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 On 8/20/2011 at 1:08 PM, cindy said: you RC. though celebrate might not be quite the word. close enough. I think "observe" is a more appropriate word
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 or feel very guilty about as you scarf that bacon cheeseburger.
eclipse0 Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 Guilt is part of why I left religious practices behind a long time ago. If you observe some and not others, the guilt hangs there. If you don't observe any, there's nothing to remind you that you're doing it wrong.
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 my guilt was installed better than that. this isn't some ikea guilt. this is 19th century brownstone guilt.
eclipse0 Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 Wow, you need yourself some professional guilt abatement... with a bulldozer
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 it took a wrecking ball to bring down the actual house i was built in... but i cherish my guilt, and would not want to lose it. it's all that keeps me out of jail.
eclipse0 Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 Jail is not a fun place, probably a good idea then
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 that's what my ancestors were thinking, i'm sure.
Niniel Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 I like the idea behind the Muslim fasting. I don´t think I could do it for so long though. The longest I managed was four days but then I could drink every other hour. I know it was difficult for Muslims in the northern part of Sweden when the fasting month was in the summer and there were midnight sun. But now I think they can use "Mecca time".
Locke Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 I'll fast, although not at set aside specific times. Christianity is not a ritualistic religion.
Niniel Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 Christianity has a lot of rituals. They vary between different churches and different Christians though.
Smiley73 Posted August 20, 2011 Author Posted August 20, 2011 @ locke: I'm pretty sure Christianity had sort sort of fast, I'm pretty sure knights went through a two day fast/reflection period before they were knighted @ Tina: I've always wondered about how people get by way up north (and south), apparently you can use Mecca/Medina time or the closest place with a proper sunrise-sunset cycle and what type of fasting were you doing? @locke (again): wouldn't communion count as a ritual?
Locke Posted August 20, 2011 Posted August 20, 2011 Nope. Read through the New Testament and count up all the rituals. Communion is the only thing that comes close.
Mrs. Cindy Gill Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 no, not the religious debate, lord save us from religious debates. . .
eclipse0 Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 On 8/20/2011 at 8:48 PM, Locke said: I'll fast, although not at set aside specific times. Christianity is not a ritualistic religion. Umm you're forgetting that Catholicism falls under Christianity, and I can assure you, there are more catholic rituals then you can count.
Talmanes Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 Well actually Christianity is like the other side of the coin as Catholicism. Based on the same thing, but very different in practice.
Tiinker Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 I have a question, What exactly do you do? Go about your regular lives just without consumption of food and water from sunrise to sunset? Or is there some sort of special ritual that's done this time of the month. When i lived in Malaysia a few of my friends did it but I never really understood it.. Has this question been asked already? I haven#t looked through the rest of the thread cos it's quite late and my eyes are about to drop out of my skull and my brain will soon melt in the heat.
eclipse0 Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 On 8/21/2011 at 2:37 AM, Talmanes said: Well actually Christianity is like the other side of the coin as Catholicism. Based on the same thing, but very different in practice. Actually what most people refer to as "Christianity" is actually Protestantism. Christianity encompasses Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Sects. So if you were going to use money as an example, if Christianity is the currency, then the three branches would be different denominations.
Leyrann Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 On 8/20/2011 at 9:03 PM, TinaHel said: Christianity has a lot of rituals. They vary between different churches and different Christians though. Christianity has not. No one. Catholicism and Protestantism and so on have. For me, Christianity is what Jesus told us. The "official" parts of Christianity are all a bit different. By far the most important rule, for Jesus, was "love everyone as you love yourself", or something like that. On 8/20/2011 at 9:16 PM, Smiley73 said: @ locke: I'm pretty sure Christianity had sort sort of fast, I'm pretty sure knights went through a two day fast/reflection period before they were knighted @ Tina: I've always wondered about how people get by way up north (and south), apparently you can use Mecca/Medina time or the closest place with a proper sunrise-sunset cycle and what type of fasting were you doing? @locke (again): wouldn't communion count as a ritual? Knights are Catholic. Communion too. On 8/21/2011 at 1:41 AM, eclipse0 said: On 8/20/2011 at 8:48 PM, Locke said: I'll fast, although not at set aside specific times. Christianity is not a ritualistic religion. Umm you're forgetting that Catholicism falls under Christianity, and I can assure you, there are more catholic rituals then you can count. As I already explained, Catholicism is not what Jesus told the people. Catholicism is a mix of this and the old European religions.
WWWwombat Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 Communion is a ritual. There is a stigma around the word ritualistic, but there's nothing wrong with having rituals. Probably a few things right with having em too.
WWWwombat Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 On 8/20/2011 at 11:54 PM, Locke said: Nope. Read through the New Testament and count up all the rituals. Communion is the only thing that comes close. Why ignore the Old Testamant? Also, what about Baptism or Marriage?
Leyrann Posted August 21, 2011 Posted August 21, 2011 On 8/21/2011 at 6:28 AM, WWWwombat said: On 8/20/2011 at 11:54 PM, Locke said: Nope. Read through the New Testament and count up all the rituals. Communion is the only thing that comes close. Why ignore the Old Testamant? Also, what about Baptism or Marriage? We don't ignore the Old Testament, except the parts where Jesus said to do so, because they are replaced. For example the 10 thingies (whatever they are called). They are replaced by one: "love other people like you love yourself".
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