Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If you are a Christian does this make you think twice about weaving with real Indian hair? Nope.
Is the fact that this hair is a sacrifice to a different god than the one you worship significant to you? Nope.
Are we encouraging deceptive practices by purchasing Indian hair? Yup.
Is this sacrilegious? Might be.
My comment wasn't about their religion, I was commenting on the ritualistic/sacrifical elements involved in the hair shaving practices.
I think buying a bag made by someone who isn't Christian is completely different than buying buying a a good that has been used as a sacrifice.
I just saw the movie "Good Hair" and was appalled when I found how Indian hair enters the market as an accesible good . Basically, a lot of Indian women sacrifice their hair to one of the gods in the Hindu religion. The shaved hair from the temple is then sold to hair dealers who put the hair in a stream of commerce to be sold in the U.S. It's a big business and many of the women have no idea this is being done to their hair/sacrifice. If you are a Christian does this make you think twice about weaving with real Indian hair?
Is the fact that this hair is a sacrifice to a different god than the one you worship significant to you?
Are we encouraging deceptive practices by purchasing Indian hair?
Is this sacrilegious?
Interesting perspective OP.
Hey Msa,
The latter example is not a parallel to the OP's central point. Would you collect the fruits that are placed at the Buddhist altar in the nail shop to sell in the fruit market?
As someone else said buying Indian hair that has been sacrificed for their God is more an an insult to their religion than it is against Christianity.
I am a Christian, but this reveal wouldn't deter me from purchasing Indian Hair. I think there are so many items we purchase that are somehow tied to ritualism (both known and unknown); who has the energy to boycott so many things?
I just focus on a personal relationship with a higher power and the rest works itself out![]()
What about the fact that we know. Does the knowledge change your view? The purpose of my post is not to bash other religions.
My point is...they're all the same thing to me. If "idol" worship is wrong in this instance, then it's wrong in all others too. When I walk into the nail shop, that altar is part of the person's "worship" to Buddha...in my eyes just by being there I'm cosigning it.
If folks were removing one of their kidneys to sacrifice to their god, and instead of letting the kidneys be thrown away doctors collected them in a hospital for transplant...please believe if I needed a kidney transplant I would be first in line. Would I still be wrong? Yes, if I believed that by taking the kidney I'm participating in the sacrifice in some way. But I'd just have to say a little prayer and keep it moving with my new kidney.
I just saw the movie "Good Hair" and was appalled when I found how Indian hair enters the market as an accesible good . Basically, a lot of Indian women sacrifice their hair to one of the gods in the Hindu religion. The shaved hair from the temple is then sold to hair dealers who put the hair in a stream of commerce to be sold in the U.S. It's a big business and many of the women have no idea this is being done to their hair/sacrifice. If you are a Christian does this make you think twice about weaving with real Indian hair?
Is the fact that this hair is a sacrifice to a different god than the one you worship significant to you?
Are we encouraging deceptive practices by purchasing Indian hair?
Is this sacrilegious?
The Bible says in James 4:17 "Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin."
If u know better, u do better. If I find out that something I own was used in idol worship, then it's my responsibility as a Christian to get rid of it.
It's not just about "boycotting" products, as someone mentioned earlier. It's about spiritual distractions and destruction.
We all believe that if God is the only way, that no one else can be "spiritual" if they aren't Christian. Not true. The devil is a spirit too.
Read Mark 5. "And when he was come out of the ship, immediately there met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit... 9And he asked him, What is thy name? And he answered, saying, My name is Legion: for we are many."
Those things sacrificed to other gods or devils come with spirits of their own. That's nothing to play with or pretend to be "ignorant" about. Spirits travel between us with ease. U meet one person and can't figure why they drain u so, or why u can't seem to stop cursing around this person, etc. Be careful with stuff like that.
I just saw the movie "Good Hair" and was appalled when I found how Indian hair enters the market as an accesible good . Basically, a lot of Indian women sacrifice their hair to one of the gods in the Hindu religion. The shaved hair from the temple is then sold to hair dealers who put the hair in a stream of commerce to be sold in the U.S. It's a big business and many of the women have no idea this is being done to their hair/sacrifice. If you are a Christian does this make you think twice about weaving with real Indian hair?
Is the fact that this hair is a sacrifice to a different god than the one you worship significant to you?
Are we encouraging deceptive practices by purchasing Indian hair?
Is this sacrilegious?