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jwinslow;833418; said:Christ's teachings don't leave room for polytheism.
I may catch heat for this post, though I mean no ill-will, but I am not sure that Christianity is so very different from past polytheistic religions. It may be that it has merely benefitted from better advertising than other religions, and has successfully managed to paint and sell itself as monotheistic (much like Judaism before it). Granted, Christianity has a much more powerful, indeed omnipotent, top God, but the lower figures in Christianity are no less powerful than the simple gods of old polytheistic religions who, often, had little more power than the ability to influence the happy ironworking of a forge or two.
I will use the understandings of Catholicism as an example of the existence of these lower gods or demi-gods of Christianity, as Catholicism is the largest denomination that is nearly universally accepted as Christian.
In Catholicism there are, to begin with, four Choirs of Angelic Hosts, arranged in nine orders. All of these angels have characteristics congruent to the gods of many polytheistic religions, and as much power and influence over human affairs. But even if this comparison is obvious, there are more than angels, of course. At last count, there were 5,120 saints. To quote Richard Dawkins, in his discussion of the survival of Pope John Paul II of an assassination attempt in 1981:
These saints appear to be easily as capable of miraculous feats as the demigods of Greece, to pick out a particular polytheistic bunch.[Pope John Paul II] attributed his survival to intervention by Our Lady of Fantina; 'a maternal hand guided the bullet.' One cannot help wondering why she didn't guide it to miss him altogether. . . The relevant point is that it wasn't just Our Lady who, in the Pope's opinion, guided the bullet, but specifically Our Lady of Fatima. Presumably Our Lady of Lourdes, Our Lady of Guadalupe, Our Lady of Medjugorje, Our Lady of Akita, Our Lady of Zeitoun, Our Lady of Garabandal and Our Lady of Knock were busy on other errands at the time.
Finally, the trinity itself, or at least the existence of God and Jesus, even if they are considered to be the same being in a Christian interpretation, would be considered polytheistic to all but the most discerning non-Christians.
I guess what I am asking, if anything, is does the elevation of the top god of a religion necessarily transform all the other superior-to-human individuals into something less than gods? Can the elevation of one really redefine others and, if so, is this redefinition really the consideration of the terms "monotheism" and "polytheism?"
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