Post 124:
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Wonder if we can make this practice more popular. Perhaps make a list of such places with a short prayer that can be offered there would be great. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->I think there is still some danger in popularising prayers to the ancient Gods of Italy, and Greece especially. In Greece, because of the inevitable renewed interest in their true Gods, the scary christos have started destroying the remnants of old temples which had until recent times been abandoned. This is only because Greeks had started visiting these temple remnants again. So the christoterrorists felt it incumbent upon themselves to be loyal to their religion and its doctrines (that is, practise christianity faithfully), by finishing the work they started in the early centuries CE and completely destroying these temples because they were becoming popular and attracting people again.
See for instance
http://ethnikoi.org/introenglish.html
and http://ethnikoi.org/kalivrisi.html <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Christian churches have been routinely built on top of destroyed ancient temples using the ruins as building materials. This is still practised today! In northern Greece, at the village Kali Vrisi, 60 km west of the city of Drama, an ancient temple of Dionysus was discovered a few years ago. On the ancient site and exactly on top of the ruins, a Christian chapel was erected.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->And there's a video called Contemporary attacks against Hellenic sacred sites (video)
Christos are afraid, very afraid. Yes, let them be afraid, because the christianity meme has every reason to fear.
Of course, that does not stop us from silently offering our sincere respect to the true Gods if we happen to visit these parts of the world. When the coast is clear for the reverted Greeks and Italians, and they can worship more publicly in their sacred places without the usual christo intolerance rearing its ugly head, we can do so too.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Wonder if we can make this practice more popular. Perhaps make a list of such places with a short prayer that can be offered there would be great. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->I think there is still some danger in popularising prayers to the ancient Gods of Italy, and Greece especially. In Greece, because of the inevitable renewed interest in their true Gods, the scary christos have started destroying the remnants of old temples which had until recent times been abandoned. This is only because Greeks had started visiting these temple remnants again. So the christoterrorists felt it incumbent upon themselves to be loyal to their religion and its doctrines (that is, practise christianity faithfully), by finishing the work they started in the early centuries CE and completely destroying these temples because they were becoming popular and attracting people again.
See for instance
http://ethnikoi.org/introenglish.html
and http://ethnikoi.org/kalivrisi.html <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Christian churches have been routinely built on top of destroyed ancient temples using the ruins as building materials. This is still practised today! In northern Greece, at the village Kali Vrisi, 60 km west of the city of Drama, an ancient temple of Dionysus was discovered a few years ago. On the ancient site and exactly on top of the ruins, a Christian chapel was erected.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->And there's a video called Contemporary attacks against Hellenic sacred sites (video)
Christos are afraid, very afraid. Yes, let them be afraid, because the christianity meme has every reason to fear.
Of course, that does not stop us from silently offering our sincere respect to the true Gods if we happen to visit these parts of the world. When the coast is clear for the reverted Greeks and Italians, and they can worship more publicly in their sacred places without the usual christo intolerance rearing its ugly head, we can do so too.