ANSWERS: 2
  • No. OT God commanded animal sacrifices not human. 3/1/26
  • Is the God ok? Your English grammar is deteriorating. Anyways, what you seem to be asking is it okay for God to sacrifice Jesus. It is God's call to have put an end to animal sacrifices in the Old Testament, and just sent Jesus (a perfect person) to carry the sins of humanity on the cross.
    • ⭐️Creamcrackered
      It's OK I just read about the god attis and amun, and how Rome had the exact same ritual of a sacrificial dying and resurrecting God as the sun, who people consumed in the effort of transcendence It's called Sparagmos, only difference is they now use "break this bread as my body" and " drink this wine as the blood"instead of flesh. Attis dies on the same date Easter, the people mourned him for 3 days before he was resurrected. Because it's the sun they saw as god, light in the darkness, life, to the earth, the sacrificial dying god, which is seen in Tiphareth Kabbalah as well, the sphere of the sun. Amun ra, horus etc all stories and parts of ancient ritual. Mary is the eternal virgin mother, because Venus and Virgo are the eternal virgin, the wheat and grain mother, Cybele, Demeter, Isis. See Glossary of ancient Roman Religion, same rituals, tracing back to Egypt. Even Vatican hills was named after Vaticanus a god of babies. There's nothing new under the sun. I'm not to bothered about my grammar, it's often difficult to even get the question to actually stay in the box description half the time, I'm certainly not interested in posturing over it. I set out to find out why Jews don't accept Jesus. A Jewish Rabbi was calling Christianity a Hellenistic cult. What I found was there is nothing authentic in the bible, even the Moses story is ancient Egyptian. The ancients even worshipped a black meteorite stone as seen in Islam, "baetyl" It's all ritual. The inner ritual is one of transcendence by the looks of it.
    • 𝙅𝙚𝙣𝙣𝙮 𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙂𝙧𝙚𝙖𝙩 ⭐
      None of what you say means anything. I wouldn't take the Pagan teachings seriously. Pagan sacrifices were acts of desperation to appease cruel gods. The Bible describes the death of Jesus as a willing, self-sacrifice meant to demonstrate love and provide redemption. As for His resurrection, it lies in its role as the foundational, validating event for Christian theology, proving Jesus' divinity, His authority over death, and the truth of His claims.

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