Can Christian Wiccan's worship the Goddess, aswell as the God and still believe

Victoria

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that there are no coincidences? At the moment I am Pure Wiccan; but two days ago I was thinking how some of my family and the guy that I really like are Christian - anyway, I found this religion, completely by accident, 'Christian wicca', (I doubt that I found it for no reason, as I do not believe in coincidences, [everything happens for a reason]). Christian Wiccan's celebrate the 2 solstices and the 2 equinoxes, (where as Wiccan's celebrate the 8 celebrations on the wheel of the year) aswell as Christmas and Easter, (which is currently what I am having to do, as my family are not Wiccan, [it's just me (and my Pagan witch ancestors)]). I'm now curious as to whether I should become one or not - however I need to know first if I can still worship the Goddess and believe that there are no coincidences?

I could really use your help on this situation, thank you :)
 
you just don't know a wicca how he became a wicca
and youdon'tt need to know
 
No, God is a vengeful, angry, jealous God remember...
 
Christians don't believe in coincidences either

btw im having a similar issue so if u every get an answer e-mail me plz and ty
 
Wiccan is not and never will be Christian.

Get saved and have eternal life in Jesus Christ.

You are not allowed to make up your own religion and call it Christianity.

Wicca is a demonic religion. witchcraft


Romans 10:9-10*(Amplified Bible)
9Because if you acknowledge and confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and in your heart believe (adhere to, trust in, and rely on the truth) that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.
*** 10For with the heart a person believes (adheres to, trusts in, and relies on Christ) and so is justified (declared righteous, acceptable to God), and with the mouth he confesses (declares openly and speaks out freely his faith) and confirms [his] salvation.

Make a conscious effort to speak these words from the very depths of your being. When you finish this prayer, you will be born again:
Heavenly Father, in the Name of Jesus, I present myself to You.
I pray and ask Jesus to be Lord over my life. I believe it in my heart, so I say it with my mouth: “Jesus has been raised from the dead.” This moment, I make Him the Lord over my life.
Jesus, come into my heart. I believe this moment that I am saved, I say it now: “I am reborn. I am a Christian. I am a child of Almighty God.”
Now, thank God for making you His child. Colossians 1:12 says, “Giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light.” You have just been made a partaker of an inheritance from God. You have just inherited the kingdom of God!
 
I'm not sure what your question is, but many people of all faiths, including Christians and Jews, believe that there are no coincidences and everything happens for a reason. I don't see a fundamental philosophical conflict on that score, although your Christian family and boyfriend might believe that there is.

On other points I would find reconciling earth-centered religions with patriarchial Abrahamic religions to be exceedingly difficult. Devout Christian T.S. Eliot in "The Wasteland" suggests the parallel of Christ and the Fisher King, and there all sorts of pagan antecedents to Christian customs, but as logical/philosophical systems of thought there are fundamental conflicts, starting with the difference between immanent god/goddess and transcendent god with feminine usually suppressed (however accurate translations of the Old Testament have many explicitly feminine references to God that have been mistranslated, deliberately or not). You also have the historical fact of over 2,000 years of hostility to "pagans" starting with the Jews persecuting the Canaanites (and bragging about it) through mass murder in the purges of "witches" in the Middle Ages and Renaissance through the angry denunciations about "witchcraft" in this thread.

In light of these difference, I would argue that celebrating 4 or 8 astronomical events is a trivial distinction between "Christian Wicca" and "Pure Wicca".

If you haven't read it, you might benefit from the novel "The Mists of Avalon," by Marion Zimmer Bradley. It retells the Arthur legend from the pagan point of view to show a conjoining of paganism and Christianity (along with violent antagonism).
 
Hrm.

Emotionally, we would say, follow what you feel most comfortable with.

Logically, christianity, and wicca, does not go in harmony.

But, as long as you aren't hurting anyone, have fun i suppose.
 
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