Adjectivepagan (not comparable) Positive pagan Superlative none (absolute)
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Antonyms
Derived termsFrom Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License. Paganism (from Latin paganus, meaning "country dweller, rustic") is the blanket term given to describe religions and spiritual practices of pre-Christian Europe, and by extension a term for polytheistic traditions or folk religion worldwide seen from a Western or Christian viewpoint. The term has various different meanings, though, from a Western perspective, it has modern connotations of a faith that has polytheistic, spiritualist, animistic or shamanic practices, such as a folk religion, historical polytheistic or neopagan religion. The term has been defined broadly, to encompass all of the religions outside the Abrahamic monotheistic group of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The group so defined includes most of the Eastern religions, Native American religions and mythologies, as well as non-Abrahamic folk religions in general. More narrow definitions will not include any of the world religions and restrict the term to local or rural currents not organized as civil religions. Characteristic of pagan traditions is the absence of proselytism and the presence of a living mythology which explains religious practice. The term "pagan" is a Christian adaptation of the "gentile" of Judaism, and as such has an inherent Abrahamic bias, and pejorative connotations among Western monotheists, comparable to heathen, and infidel also known as kafir (كافر) and mushrik in Islam. For this reason, ethnologists avoid the term "paganism," with its uncertain and varied meanings, in referring to traditional or historic faiths, preferring more precise categories such as polytheism, shamanism, pantheism, or animism; however others criticise the use of these terms, claiming that these are only aspects that different faiths may share and do not denote the religions themselves. Since the later 20th century, "Pagan" or "Paganism" has become widely used as a self-designation by adherents of Neopaganism. As such, various modern scholars have begun to apply the term to three separate groups of faiths: Historical Polytheism (such as Celtic polytheism and Norse paganism), Folk/ethnic/Indigenous religions (such as Chinese folk religion and African traditional religion), and Neo-paganism (such as Wicca and Germanic Neopaganism). From Wikipedia under the
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unknown 2009-05-31 19:13:50 Adam Rubin has been the Daily News' Mets beat writer since 2003. He is a Long Island native and author of "Pedro, Carlos and Omar: The Story of a. The Wild Hunt Pagan Burials & Animal Sacrifice Arrests
Jason 2009-05-16 15:34:07 Four recent news reports tie into two larger stories, the first is the issue of . Pagan. burial space, a matter that will become more prominent as the Baby Boomers travel further into their retirement years. There are already dedicated ... Pagan drop vs. Smoothcut
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Sentimentalist Magazine I've been following Arkansas-based Chase Pagan since one of his first NYC appearances years ago at a Sentimentalist Magazine party shortly before the ... The land below
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Examiner.com The irony here, of course, is that Islam teaches that it is the final revelation and, among other things, does away with pagan beliefs that had crept into ... From Google News Search: "pagan" pagan star gif
407px x 554px | 11.90kB [source page] 21 Jul 2003 17 39 44k passionflowertree jpg 04 Nov 2005 06 28 320k pagan star gif 29 Jun 2003 07 37 12k padpatternimages From Yahoo Image Search: "pagan" how do pagans explain the pagan emperor constantine's conversion from paganism to christianity? Q. As in, Constantine was a pagan. And as a pagan, you're not supposed to believe in the Lord Jesus as Saviour of the World. But Constantine saw the cross in a vision and won a battle. And assuming that constantine was a devout pagan, why would he convert from the god/goddesses or paganism to the God of the Christians? instead of "slight agnostic Paganism" why not just Christianity again. ^_^ Asked by Lion of Judah Regular - Tue Feb 3 11:12:22 2009 - - 20 Answers - 0 Comments A. Actually you made two huge fallacious assumption. One is that Pagans cannot worship Christ or that Christ is outside the Pantheon. Many ancient Pagans ( and modern Neoplatonist ) indeed worship and regard Christ as savior .. just not as the unique savior but rather one of the many savior. In the Neoplatonist concept ( which Constantine by the way was heavily influenced by ) the material realm is displaced out of the formless realm. Souls in the materal realm are trapped. The mysteries, the philosophies, the religio, the worship, the ritus, theurgy etc.. are all meant to help the soul elevate and move out from the realm of matter back to where all the souls rightfully belong to .. the Perfect State of the One and the Many. Christ like… [cont.] Answered by Karl T - Tue Feb 3 14:27:23 2009 Did the ancient pagan Germanic peoples have priests? Q. I'm well aware of the druids among the Celts, but some sources indicate the ancient Germanics when they were still pagan did not have priests or religious leaders. Is this true? Asked by Aegimius - Fri Apr 3 22:55:54 2009 - - 6 Answers - 1 Comments A. answer: there were some priests/priestesses - you can see them referred to from descriptions of traveling priests/priestesses of Freya by Tacitus. Commonly though, no. Each head of the house was seen as a priest and priestess of the religion because it was part of daily life. Answered by Ruth Aravah - Fri Apr 3 23:04:16 2009 Why do eggs a pagan sex syombol in use around easter?
Q. Since well known fact egss & bunnies are pagan part of sex worship how could you claim to be "Christan" if you use such syombles? Wernt you comanded to "guard from IDOLS? Asked by drew13au - Fri Apr 10 22:43:58 2009 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments A. Rabbits and eggs are both symbols of the fertility goddess Eostre/Ishtar/Ostara. Her symbol is also the moon, in which some cultures see a rabbit instead of a face. Eggs also symbolize the moon and are the ultimate symbol of creation and new life. The basket is a symbol of the womb in which this new life is carried. The feast day is pagan and was widely celebrated way before the time of Jesus. Like pretty much all holidays, it was adopted by Christians to help get more converts. However, since the point is to celebrate new life and the hope of continuance, Christian symbols of a Resurrection day and the old pagan symbols mean the same thing. Just like Christmas, we are all celebrating the same thing, just using different symbols. But -… [cont.] Answered by unknown - Fri Apr 10 22:50:03 2009 From Yahoo Answer Search: "pagan" |






