There was a time when you could punch out a group of Hare Krishna's and everyone had a good laugh - like in the movie "Airplane". Upstanding American parents would once hire "de-programmers" to rescue their children from the Moonie cult as law enforcement would look the other way to charges of "kidnapping". And of course we can't forget the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and his "Transcendental Meditation" cult as millions lined up to pay for their secret "mantra". The days of the hippie flower children and their quest for religion from shit hole squalor countries is largely over, but that hasn't stopped Satan from his relentless recruiting.
These days 40% of the Millenials don't even know that the infant in the nativity scenes across the country is the Baby Jesus, and now the Icelanders version of that "old time religion" are the gods Odin and Thor. It might be cold and inhospitable in Iceland, but Jesus has planned a warm place for them to spend eternity.
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Iceland’s fastest growing religion will soon complete the first temple to Thor and Odin in 1000 years
Vilhelm Carlström 04 Jul 2018 4:56 PM
The Norse gods are making a strong comeback after a thousand years in the shadows. Outmaneuvered by Christianity around year 1000, Nordic paganism is now Iceland’s fastest growing religion. From 570 members in 2002, the ‘association of the faith of the Æsir’ – Ásatrúarfélagið – now numbers 3900 Icelanders, making it the largest non-Christian religion in the country.
“I don’t believe anyone believes in a one-eyed man who is riding about on a horse with eight feet,” High priest Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson told the Guardian. “We see the stories as poetic metaphors and a manifestation of the forces of nature and human psychology.”
The pantheistic religion appeals to modern individualism while upholding traditional Icelandic values like honesty, tolerance and respect towards the environment.
Although long in the making, the Ásatrúarfélagið’s first temple is finally expected to stand ready by the end of 2018. It is designed by Icelandic architect and member of the association Magnús Jensson and given a form to underscore a close relationship to earth, sky and sun. The temple will hold a maximum of 250 people for religious ceremonies and concerts.
Although the temple, called Hof Ásatrúarfélagsins, will be Iceland’s first in 1000 years it is likely not to be the last. The land was donated by the city of Reykjavik, and other municipalities have shown interest in having temples built, seeing perhaps the potential allure of tourism. Similarly, Denmark consecrated a temple called Valheim Hof to Odin for the first time in a millennium in 2016.
https://nordic.businessinsider.com/i...-1000-years--/
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