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Exispathi
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Exispathi
@exispathi
Oh fuck, I woke up again..
Αττική, (πίσω από το Nadir) 参加日 Kasım 2014
668 フォロー中688 フォロワー

@Touztouz07 Για αρχή δεν είναι Καλαματιανός. Αλλιώς θα έγραφε ΓΟΥΡΝΟΠΟΥΛΑ
Νόμος
Ελληνικά

@manmarziiyaan Of course it's rape.
Having sex with a person that consents is not rape, nor "cheating", since he/she consents. And IF (that's a big if btw) you need to ask a third person, that should be your SEXUAL partner.
🙂
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@DominusAD78 @Luka6134 @AtheistTakes You know that Greeks didn't use today's calendar, since it wasn't invented yet, right? Please tell me you were searching by days near winter solstice, and not 25 of December? 😂
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@DominusAD78 @Luka6134 @AtheistTakes It's not "around winter". I gave you the source, but you discarded it. Believe what you want. But it's belief, not knowledge.
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@_hyuna_lads @ShitpostGate Whatever, we agree that men didn't sexualise that part 🙂
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@exispathi @ShitpostGate Tf you mean women did? That's already a sexual part why not use ur brain first?
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@Luka6134 @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes 🔻 If you want ancient texts as you asked, look at
Ευριπίδης, Βάκχαι
Αριστοφάνης, Αχαρνής
Μακρόβιος, Saturnalia
Πλούταρχος, Περί φιλοπλουτίας
Ομηρικός Ύμνος, Ειρεσιώνη
Keep your eyes and mind open 🙂

@Luka6134 @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes 🔻Dionysus, who was also called "divine baby" and "good shepherd" was symbolised as the newborn sun. Dionysus, who was the baby that Δίας impragnate Σεμέλη not with sex, but transformed into a lighting that stroke her. 🔽

@Isabelletkrause Why am I seeing Christians celebrating the Jewish Pesach?
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@WreckersDatas Yeah... An average person, let's say Jesus, would disagree with you. You see, he was the lucky 66-75% of babies that didn't die the first year of their life. Now, I'm no mentalist, but I'm guessing you are happy not fighting those odds.
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Science doesn't answer things such as:
-morality
-rationality
Yet those things are essential to humans.
HAMZZY@Hamzythacreator
How religion solves problems!
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@DominusAD78 @Luka6134 @AtheistTakes And here's your text, don't just react, learn! liberal.gr/epikairotita/t…
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@DominusAD78 @Luka6134 @AtheistTakes I'm confusing modern greek?! Είσαι πιο χαζός κι από ροδάκινο. Στις ημέρες αυτές γίνονταν διονυσιακές γιορτές. Also, Δίας hadn't sex to impragnate Dionysus (AKA "good shepherd", AKA "divine baby") mother Σεμέλη, he strikes her with a lighting bolt.

@DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes I didn't say Dionysus was born, I said celebrated at that day, they were celebrating birth of sun. Just Google. You are refusing history to support a meaningless date, not even mentioned in your holy book.
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You’re just asserting “same day = same origin” without evidence.
First, show a primary source where Dionysus is born on December 25. You won’t find one. The Dionysia weren’t even in late December. So that claim collapses immediately.
Second, even your fallback doesn’t work. Saturnalia (Dec 17–23) is earlier than Dec 25, not on it. And the Dec 25 festival you’re reaching for...Sol Invictus, shows up clearly in the 3rd century. Christians are already celebrating Christ before that. If anything, the imperial cult is reacting to a date already in Christian use, not the other way around.
Third, December 25 isn’t some pagan copy. It comes from an internal Christian reckoning: Christ’s conception tied to the date of the Passion (March 25), which places His birth in late December. That’s a Jewish-Christian calculation.
And you’re still dodging the main issue. Christianity is making a historical claim:
A real man, Jesus Christ, executed under Pontius Pilate, in a specific time and place.
So here’s the question:
Where is the source that shows Dionysus:
born of a virgin
on December 25
and executed in history under a named ruler?
If you can’t produce that, you don’t have a leg to stand on.
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@DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes On those holidays (Ηλιούγεννα) by the way, they were celebrating with "dionisia", fests dedicated to, you guessed right, Dionysus.

@DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes Well what a coincidence! Your god, Jesus, was born on the exact same day as the sun in Ηλιούγεννα! A holiday that Romans took along with the rest of greek mythology/religion, kept the characters and change only the names. Then they found a third (true this time) god, born 25/12!!
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@k4tskut @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes You mean the Romans didn't choose this exact day because of the pagan celebrations? And on those greek celebrations for the "birth of sun" at 25 if December, didn't they used to make what was known as dionisia fest?
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@exispathi @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes His point is IN THE MYTHOLOGY/BELIEF/RELIGION, dionysus was never born from a virgin. So the “similarities” listed above are just bs
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@Luka6134 @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes Really...? You didn't find greek Ηλιούγεννα (means birth of sun, and guess what, Christmas is named Χριστούγεννα) oh, and they were celebrating god Dionysus

@exispathi @DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes Well the only instance I can find of that occurs around mid 4th century, after the 25th of December was already calculated.
So for the benefit of the doubt
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@DominusAD78 @AtheistTakes I won't answer to all of them, but:
Jesus being born from a virgin is also mythological, as Dionysus was religion back then, nothing "historical", aye you serious believing your religion is history?! Pagan celebrating 25/12, that's historical, not the actual "return of god sun".
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This meme is just recycled Zeitgeist propaganda. It falls apart the second you check actual sources instead of internet infographics.
It invents parallels that don’t exist in the original texts.
1. Mithra
No virgin birth
No crucifixion
No “resurrection after 3 days”
No 12 disciples
Mithras is famous for killing a bull, not being killed
This is basic scholarship. The Roman cult of Mithras doesn’t even preserve narratives like the Gospels. It’s mostly ritual imagery. The meme is just making things up.
2. Krishna
Not born of a virgin (his mother Devaki has a normal conception)
No crucifixion
No “3 days dead then resurrected”
No 12 disciples in any parallel sense
Krishna’s story (from texts like the Bhagavata Purana) is a mythological cycle spanning lifetimes, not a historical, linear life like Christ.
3. Dionysus
Not born of a virgin (his mother Semele is impregnated by Zeus)
No crucifixion
No 3-day resurrection narrative like the Gospels
The “wine” connection is superficial
Dionysus is a fertility/wine deity tied to seasonal cycles, not a once-for-all historical redeemer.
4. The “December 25” claim
The Gospels never give a date for Christ’s birth
December 25 develops later in Christian tradition
It’s not evidence of copying anything
5. The “copycat religion” claim collapses historically
Christianity doesn’t come out of pagan mystery cults. It comes out of Second Temple Judaism.
Strict monotheism
Messianic expectation
Covenant theology
Fulfillment of Hebrew Scripture
The earliest Christians were Jews who reinterpreted their own Scriptures around Christ. That’s why the New Testament constantly quotes the Old.
If this were pagan borrowing, you’d expect early Christians to appeal to Mithra or Dionysus. They don’t. They appeal to Isaiah, the Psalms, and Moses.
6. Category error
This meme lumps together:
Mythological cycles (Dionysus)
Symbolic cult figures (Mithras)
Polytheistic avatars (Krishna)
…then compares them to:
A historical Jewish teacher executed under Pontius Pilate
With multiple independent textual sources
Anchored in a real place and time
That’s not comparison. That’s confusion.
This isn’t scholarship. It’s a meme repeating claims that have been debunked for decades.
If Jesus is just a copy, then show one primary source where:
Mithra is crucified
Krishna rises after 3 days
Dionysus redeems humanity through a historical execution
You won’t find it.
Because it doesn’t exist.
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