Active Now

Spunky
Discussion » Questions » Food and Drink » I'm eating "Day of the Dead" bread. What you think about that? Are you jelly?

I'm eating "Day of the Dead" bread. What you think about that? Are you jelly?

It's called pan de muerto. My maid brought it me when she came this week. It is sweet, like pan de huevo, which is bread of egg. So good! 

Posted - November 5, 2016

Responses


  • Yes.  I'm jelly that I don't have servants that bake me dessert breads when they aren't cleaning my house.



    :(
      November 5, 2016 3:55 PM MDT
    1

  • 5614
    Come out of Babylon and give up your pagan ways.
      November 5, 2016 4:14 PM MDT
    0

  • 2515
    @O-uknow, Which pagan ways? Our culture is based on pagan history: Easter egg hunt, burning the Yule log, decorating the Christmas tree, the resurrection. 

    Better read "The Golden Bough" by Sir James George Frazer. This post was edited by Marguerite, the Beloved at November 6, 2016 7:12 AM MST
      November 5, 2016 4:53 PM MDT
    1

  • 5614
    All of it and adhere to the teachings of The Lord. Do not adopt the ways of the heathen.
      November 5, 2016 5:08 PM MDT
    0

  • oh the irony . 
      November 5, 2016 5:28 PM MDT
    1

  • "I'd rather reign in hell than serve in heaven."



    God

    •God takes away Adam and Eve's eternal life, thus commiting the first murder, and holds their descendants responsible and visiting Adam and Eve's punishment down on their children. In today's moral standards, the sins of the father die with the father.
    •God destroys all life on Earth in a great flood, except for a drunk (Noah) and his family, for failing to worship him.
    •God's tenth plague upon the Israelites was the unjustified murder of all firstborn sons in Egypt, which undoubtedly included little children.
    •Before sending the plagues to Egypt, God "hardened Pharaoh's heart" so that he wouldn't let the Israelites go, so he could have an excuse to visit horrible plagues upon them, like boils, killing cattle and murdering all firstborn sons. (Exodus 4:21)
    •God orders the Levites to kill their "every man and his neighnor" for worshipping another god. This cost 3000 lives. (Exodus 32:27)
    •God sends a plague to the Israelites, apparently feeling that mass-butchery wasn't enough of a punishment. (Exodus 32:35)
    •God kills Onan for refusing to impregnate his late brother's (whom God also slew) wife and instead "spilling his seed on the ground." (Genesis 38:8-10)
    •God kills the entire populations of Soddom and Gammorah (again, including women, children and infants) for practicing certain sexual techniques.
    •God gives all Philistines hemorrhoids in their pubic areas. (1 Samuel 5:9)
    •God kills over 50,000 people for looking at an ark. (1 Samuel 6:19)
    •God kills 70,000 people because King David decided to have a census. (1 Chronicles 21:7-14)
    •God approves of slavery, and instructs owners to beat their slaves. (Proverbs 29:19)
    •And, finally, God makes sure that if you are guilty of even the smallest transgression, you shall suffer endlessly for all eternity, following a dramatic homecoming for Jesus, who will be extremely pissed off at everyone for putting him to death, even though it was just the Romans and even though he knew what was going to happen beforehand, and he could have easily avoided it by using his power as God to perform a miracle and prove who he was. (See the entire book of Revelation)

    Satan

    •Satan, like Prometheus, gave knowledge to humanity by giving Eve the fruit from the forbidden tree. Because of Satan, humanity gained knowledge of good and evil, according to Genesis. Since we couldn't have possessed knowledge of good and evil before eating the fruit, Adam and Eve couldn't have known that eating the fruit was evil, so it seems a little harsh to punish them as severely as God did. Satan gave humans true capacity for moral judgment, unlike God, who simply expected everyone to mindlessly obey his orders.
    •There is no biblical record of Satan engaging in the murder of torture of any human being, unlike God, who is guilty (and proudly guilty) of commiting genocide.
    •There is no biblical record of Satan ever ordering someone to kill someone else, unlike God, who has repeatedly demanded the deaths of those who commit even the smallest of offenses.
    •Satan will not be holding a massively dramatic ceremony full of blood and death for the return of his son to Earth. God apparently will.

    ( taken from http://www.daltonator.net/durandal/religion/satan.shtml)
      November 6, 2016 7:15 AM MST
    0