Everyone's Always Like "mythology Disproves Christianity." No!!!! Mythology Proves That Our God Is A

Everyone's always like "mythology disproves Christianity." No!!!! Mythology proves that our God is a God of stories, of details, of intentionality. Everyone is so hung up on "every culture has a story of the dying and rising god/a virgin birth, etc. etc" but that's just it. Every culture has it, because somewhere, somewhen, it was true. Mythology is simply a reminder that God fashioned for us a language that we are all born knowing— a religious language, a language of the sacred. It's the reason so many cultures view bread as something sacred and use incense in their worship. Christ did not become man to unteach us "pagan" vocabulary. The vocabulary was never pagan to begin with! It was, and is, human. Christ became man, took on flesh, and spoke the language we were all born knowing: the language of mythos and sacred rituals, of prayers and of liturgy.

Do you think Jesus did not intimately know the world He entered? Do you think He didn't know the stories of Dionysus? Or the surprisingly Christocentric imagery associated with Apollo? Do you think He did not watch Virgil pen his fourth ecologue, in which he prophesies the coming of a baby, a redeemer? Do you think the all-knowing, all-powerful God who crafted Virgil's soul with his own hands didn't know that?

Mythology reminds us that God wrote the story. That He etched into the very marrow of our bones the language we need to know Him. When He came, He came in a way that was unexpected. But it was the way we would best recognize Him.

More Posts from Adinelleggreeo and Others

7 months ago
Daily Doodles- Day 170- 04/10/24

Daily Doodles- Day 170- 04/10/24

A plant cell! I've finally gotten around to making a plant cell painting and I'm looking forward to playing around with it!

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
10 months ago
Daily Doodles- Day 107- 31/07/24

Daily Doodles- Day 107- 31/07/24

An Oc of mine from a dystopian-type short story I want to write. In her world, people willingly get their natural body parts replaced with robotics. Being a flesh and blood human is seen as barbaric.

She wants to be 100% robot, just like the most popular and well-respected people in society. Obviously, there's a catch and she may have gone too far to avoid it.

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
11 months ago
Daily Doodles- Day 74- 28/06/24

Daily Doodles- Day 74- 28/06/24

A combination of scribble art and character drawing! I was watching Peter Draws on YouTube and decided to try something inspired by his doodle art.

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
8 months ago
Daily Doodles- Day 157- 24/09/24

Daily Doodles- Day 157- 24/09/24

This was supposed to be a cute librarian girl. She's cute, but doesn't really scream 'librarian'.

I was looking into what education I needed to pursue to be a librarian. I'm good with where I'm at right now, but I may want to pursue something else one day.

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
10 months ago
Daily Doodles- Day 94- 18/07/24

Daily Doodles- Day 94- 18/07/24

I was thinking of Bridgerton fashion. I haven't nor do I plan to watch it (not my cup of tea) but I love the fashion of the era the show is set in.

This is just a random girl in a vaguely Bridgerton-esque dress.

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
2 years ago

An Angel Passing Through Cover Art

Read my short story here:

Archive Of Our Own

Fictionpress

Tumblr post

Oil Spill Photo: Photo by Daniel Olah on Unsplash

-----------------

Read the rest below:

An Angel Passing Through Cover Art

This story was part of my final assignment for the creative writing course that I took in 2022. For a smaller assignment, I had to design a cover for my story. This is what I came up with.

I wanted to try a minimalist cover that was more symbolic instead of too on the nose. It features the silhouette of the main character, fourteen-year-old Claire Baptiste. She's crying tears that fade into an oil spill rainbow (read the story to find out what that is). That's to hint at what she's witnessing. The thing above her head is a neuron cell. These are the cells that send and receive signals from our brains. It is supposed to vaguely resemble a halo (hinting back to the name of the story) and also hints at her mind being tampered with.

I love the font I found for it. It's called Vallium. I was thinking along the lines of delicate and shaky. Seeing as the cover was solid, it would be easy to see a font like that.

It's quite funny that I was drawn to a minimalist design when I'm an artist that loves pattern and detail.


Tags
1 year ago
Daily Doodles- Day 9- 24/04/24

Daily Doodles- Day 9- 24/04/24

I had something else planned for today, but I'm tired, I have work tomorrow and I don't have the time to finish it.

Have this cool looking girl instead! I've always liked the design of characters whose eyes are 'attached' to their heads.

The tag for this is #agdoodles


Tags
9 months ago

I'm curious, what do you think of 1st Corinthians 14:34-35?

What we think of it doesn’t matter; what I think of it matters even less; what it says is what matters. It’s the Word of God.

“The women are to keep silent in the churches, for they are not permitted to speak, but are to subject themselves, just as the Law also says. But if they desire to learn anything, let them ask their own husbands at home, for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in church.”

Everyone’s got a problem with that because it sounds like the Bible is saying women can’t ever talk in church at all. That’s not what it’s saying, though. You know why? Because this is two verses plucked straight out of a book that has 437 verses in it. That’s like if I read two sentences out of the middle of one of your emails to a close family member and took issue with whatever those two sentences said. Even though the context determines the meaning, so I have no right to get offended when I don’t understand the context. So what’s the context of 1 Corinthians by the time you get to 14:34-35?

The Apostle Paul is writing to a church in the Gentile city of Corinth in AD 53 or 54. That church was a blend of Jewish Christians and Greek Christians. Two completely different cultures were figuring out what the “assembly of the saints,” or “the first church services” were supposed to look like. And to make matters more complicated, they lived in one of the most morally bankrupt cities of that age. Literally, the Corinthian people had a Greek word coined to describe their immorality. So the people who lived there were generally all messed up, in terms of not knowing what was right and what was wrong. That extended to their church services.

The whole context of 1 Corinthians is “what is a church that glorifies the Lord supposed to look like?” The context of the specific chapter, 14, is “what should church assembly that glorifies the Lord look like? What should it not look like?”

How do I know? Read the verses that come before it. At the beginning of the chapter, Paul explains that spiritual gifts are for edifying other people. In fact, everything done in a church service, where the saints are gathered, is not for an individual. It’s for the edification of the whole group. So what might be okay to do in your own home or in private between you and God is not okay, because it’s not mindful, considerate, or edifying to other Christians when you’re in a church service.

Specifically, the Corinthians are all claiming to “prophesy” (get direct revelation from God) and “speak in tongues” (speak in known, but various and foreign, languages) all at once during the service. Everybody’s shouting over each other. Some people are shouting over each other “THUS SAYS THE LORD,” which is a huge deal. Because obviously if you’re going to claim that God has told you something, everyone should shut up, listen, and determine whether or not you’re telling the truth, because what could be a bigger deal than God speaking? But that’s not how the church in Corinth was treating it. Their services were helping nobody, least of all themselves, because it was loud chaotic pandemonium and nobody I was being edified. Everybody was shouting and judging. Including women. By verse 26, Paul is going:

“What is the outcome then, brothers? When you assemble, each one has a psalm, has a teaching, has a revelation, has a tongue, has a translation. Let all things be done for edification. If anyone speaks in a tongue, it should be by two or at the most three, and each in turn, and one must translate; but if there is no translator, he must keep silent in the church, and let him speak to himself and to God. And let two or three prophets speak, and let the others pass judgment. But if a revelation is made to another who is seated, the first one must keep silent. For you can all prophesy one by one, so that all may learn and all may be exhorted. And the spirits of prophets are subject to prophets; for God is not a God of confusion but of peace, as in all the churches of the saints.”

And then he adds,

“The women are to keep silent in the churches, for they are not permitted to speak, but are to subject themselves, just as the Law also says. But if they desire to learn anything, let them ask their own husbands at home, for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in church. Was it from you that the word of God first went forth? Or has it arrived to you only?

“If anyone thinks he is a prophet or spiritual, let him recognize that the things which I write to you are the Lord’s commandment. But if anyone remains ignorant about this, he is ignored by God.

“Therefore, my brothers, earnestly desire to prophesy, and do not forbid to speak in tongues. But all things must be done properly and in an orderly manner.”

Do you get it? The point is, “what does this specific situation, which is a church service, look like if we’re trying to do things in a God-honoring, orderly manner? Here’s what it does not look like: women can’t just stand up in church and take up the role of judge over men who are shouting that they are speaking from God, and call certain men impostors and certain men prophets.”

The point is not “all women should never ever speak in all church services because that’s disgraceful, they only get to talk to their husbands and get told what to do.”

If it were, then explain to me why, three chapters earlier, when he’s talking about head-coverings, Paul writes that women can prophesy in public?

“But every woman who has her head uncovered while praying or prophesying, shames her head, for she is one and the same as the woman whose head is shaved.”

(if you want to talk about why the heck a woman has to have her head covered when she prophesies, blah blah blah, let’s talk about that too, but the answer’s going to be the same: context determines meaning, meaning is correct interpretation, etc.)

Additionally, why would Paul be commending the women in the church who have taught their sons and grandsons? How can they teach if they’re never allowed to talk in church, or if their only role in all contexts is “shut up and learn?”

Because that’s not their only biblical role. And that’s not what Paul was saying. Paul was saying, “in this specific context, here’s how a woman (among all the other people groups I’m also addressing) should conduct herself when the goal is to edify the believers in a church service, and not let anything get in the way of that goal.”

Now.

Guess what?

If the Bible did say, “all women shut up and listen all the time, let the men do the talking,” would you listen to it?

You, reading this. Would you have a problem with it? If that’s what God Sid to do, would you sit in judgement over God and say, “no, infinite Creator of all matter and life, You’re mistaken about how You should be worshipped and what these little creatures You made are for, let me correct and educate You with the judgement coming out of the three-pound lump of gray matter, which You designed and graciously allowed me to have in the first place, sitting inside my skull. Let me, the creature, tell You, the Creator, where you’re wrong and what ‘Being God’ should be like.”

I hope not. But I was super convicted reading this chapter for the first time and finding myself a) misunderstanding it and then b) having the appalling gall and arrogance to be outraged by it.

Who in the world am I? Who am I to be outraged, if God did say, “be quiet and spend your life listening to men?” If that were what He was saying, my response should be, “Yes, Lord.”

Why are we so concerned about being allowed to speak? What do we have to say that’s so great, that’s so necessary, that’s so devastating to have “removed” from us, anyway? Why do we care so much about being heard? Is it because we have something to say that could really help men, in the church services? Oh, really? And if we women don’t say it, God won’t edify the men? He’ll be handicapped because we were muzzled?

What’s so offensive about being told to stop talking and ask questions to learn, anyway? Why is that so infuriating, to us? We’re fools. The whole point of the Gospel is, “He (Jesus) must increase; I must decrease.” The best place in the world to be is at the feet of Jesus, learning. Humble. Not producing anything of ourselves, but absorbing everything He has to teach us. Who cares if it’s our husbands He plans to do that through? Who cares if we can’t teach men in church? What, we think God can’t handle that? We think He can’t teach them His own way, that His plan was flawed, that they’re “missing out” because God dropped the ball by telling us not to stand up in service and disrupt everything with this great ‘word’ we have, that nobody else has?

Ugh. God forgive me for ever even approaching a mindset that thinks I have something to say, and if I don’t say it, He won’t be able to accomplish His will. God forgive me for ever thinking my Western modern culture knows better than His divine plan. He designed human beings and men and women and what would best serve us before “culture” or “social frameworks” were ever even conceived of.

We all need to be a lot more humble. Me first.

I would encourage you to test what I said. If you read this, you should spend an equal amount of time studying the Bible for yourself and seeing if I was right, and if that’s really what God said and meant, based on the context, which determines meaning, because there is such a thing as “correct and incorrect interpretation” when the God of the universe meant something by what He said. And I could’ve gotten it wrong. And you don’t want to get it wrong.


Tags
  • soiwillgotothelakes
    soiwillgotothelakes liked this · 1 month ago
  • relativelywellknown
    relativelywellknown liked this · 1 month ago
  • lucien-calore
    lucien-calore reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • lucien-calore
    lucien-calore liked this · 1 month ago
  • darklight-sonata
    darklight-sonata liked this · 1 month ago
  • nightroses13
    nightroses13 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • aucuparia-ash
    aucuparia-ash liked this · 2 months ago
  • porchmilk
    porchmilk liked this · 2 months ago
  • snake-bites-tail
    snake-bites-tail reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • ofmiceandmechs
    ofmiceandmechs liked this · 2 months ago
  • allpurposelesbian
    allpurposelesbian liked this · 2 months ago
  • stabbedthrutheeye
    stabbedthrutheeye liked this · 2 months ago
  • gothboyfrnd
    gothboyfrnd liked this · 2 months ago
  • periwinkledragons
    periwinkledragons liked this · 2 months ago
  • periwinkledragons
    periwinkledragons reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • stjudasiscariot
    stjudasiscariot reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • grandpa-spooks
    grandpa-spooks liked this · 2 months ago
  • angelineve
    angelineve reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • angelineve
    angelineve liked this · 2 months ago
  • veiledcarrion
    veiledcarrion liked this · 2 months ago
  • thelovelesscatholic
    thelovelesscatholic liked this · 2 months ago
  • soloyoyquienmas
    soloyoyquienmas liked this · 2 months ago
  • johnny-appleachia
    johnny-appleachia reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • johnny-appleachia
    johnny-appleachia liked this · 2 months ago
  • nightroses13
    nightroses13 liked this · 2 months ago
  • ohholydyke
    ohholydyke liked this · 2 months ago
  • v-tired-queer
    v-tired-queer liked this · 2 months ago
  • maxterofnone
    maxterofnone liked this · 2 months ago
  • proseandpsalms
    proseandpsalms reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • frolickingwithfairies
    frolickingwithfairies liked this · 2 months ago
  • a2on1break
    a2on1break liked this · 2 months ago
  • esperanzarchivos
    esperanzarchivos liked this · 2 months ago
  • decayingjournals
    decayingjournals liked this · 3 months ago
  • chiikowa
    chiikowa liked this · 3 months ago
  • wisdomwillow
    wisdomwillow liked this · 3 months ago
  • sugababi
    sugababi liked this · 3 months ago
  • cardcaptorchristian
    cardcaptorchristian liked this · 3 months ago
  • shadowjinx626
    shadowjinx626 liked this · 3 months ago
  • lightningbreath
    lightningbreath reblogged this · 3 months ago
  • vermomancer
    vermomancer liked this · 3 months ago
  • eadrey-the-iptscray
    eadrey-the-iptscray liked this · 3 months ago
  • gi-joey
    gi-joey liked this · 3 months ago
  • sorceryundone
    sorceryundone liked this · 3 months ago
  • mywitheredloveslastforever
    mywitheredloveslastforever liked this · 4 months ago
  • idomari
    idomari reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • idomari
    idomari liked this · 4 months ago
  • holdthegirrrl
    holdthegirrrl liked this · 4 months ago
adinelleggreeo - Adinelle Ggreeo
Adinelle Ggreeo

I share my art and writing and sometimes I reblog stuff that I like.You can also find my stuff atYouTube, AO3 and FictionPress

373 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags