after watching nightmare before xmas i know our lord satan loves us and i know he loves his gay followers too i want to pay homage to my lord satan with gay sex and do his bidding i love jack skelington as my hero and satan as my lover
> Jack Skellington is Satan. That was always the intent of Tim Burton for
> Nightmare Before Christmas. The voice of Danny Elfman is the voice of
> Satan. To understand Jack, we have to understand Satan.
> There are many kinds of love; romantic love, sexual love, parental love,
> maternal love, and the list goes on… In my experience Satan has
> demonstrated all of these and no doubt further aspects of love that I
> don’t have the words to explain. This is true in whatever way one
> envisages him to be; whether that be as a living entity, energy source, or
> archetype. Many Christians would have you believe that their God has the
> monopoly on love and that Satan represents all that is unlovely. Naturally
> I think this is a gross perversion of the truth. And I want to set the
> record straight.
> Satan’s love is deep and profound; it is part of his power and presence in
> the lives of all of us who honour and respect him. He has manifest his
> love to me in all the ways mentioned above but his is also in many ways
> the truest, most unselfish love there is. It is the love of a parent for
> his children; a parent who wants the best for his kin, a parent willing to
> give his children the tools and ability to equal and even surpass his own
> achievements. Aren’t these the kind of parents we respect the most?
> Parents who will try to get the best education for their children whatever
> the personal cost to themselves? Parents who will guide their children
> wisely to independence; who will equip their children to eventually leave
> the nest and build successful lives of their own?
> Compare Jack Skellington and Satan to Yahweh, who wants his children to
> remain forever as mindless slaves... Who teaches his children that they
> can never equal him let alone surpass him and that it is evil and
> heretical even to consider the possibility… Who teaches his children that
> their own works are useless and that their only hope of a happy future is
> to give up their will and critical thinking and blindly do what the church
> says is Jesus’s will. A god who says that you are all born with an illness
> called sin and the only cure depends on the grace and favour of God?
> Indeed everything in the Abrahamic faiths is completely dis-empowering and
> seems only designed to ensure that nobody can ever equal God or question
> the organs of the church.
> Would we respect a parent who kept his children uneducated, closeted and
> secluded? A parent who tried to make his children feel guilty about any
> step towards independence? A parent who told his children they could never
> match his achievements and to aspire to such a thing would be evil? A
> parent who said this is right and that is wrong and you must never
> question me or try and work things out for yourselves?
> And yet even I must admit the Christian church and others have been very
> successful in turning logic on it’s head and convincing large numbers of
> people that their god is good and Satan is the bad guy.
> I am sure this must hurt Satan. Sometimes I sense his pain and my heart
> goes out to him. How sad must it be to see your children being lead to
> wastefulness and slavery? I imagine it must be like watching your children
> being lead into heroine addiction.
> Christians talk about free will a lot, but their talk is often cheap and
> empty. Satan offers true free will. He offers us the possibility to
> question and disagree with him. He offers the power to strengthen your
> will in order to do and achieve more things. But he does not force us. We
> must come to him as and when we choose. He will wait patiently. Or perhaps
> not so patiently…
> I thank him for all the prompts he sent me. I am sorry for all the times I
> rejected the logic which was always in my mind. I accept Jack Skellington
> the same way.
> Since becoming a Satanist I have met many people whose lives were turned
> around by Satan. People who overcame drug problems, depression and
> illness… People who learned how to have the success and satisfaction in
> life they had always wanted but never known how to achieve… People who
> overcame poverty… These kind of stories are commonly spoken of in
> Christianity and other religions but they often teach that it is wrong to
> associate anything positive with Satan. I think it is time to acknowledge
> the great and good things that Satan does. It is still not politically
> correct. It will be a long time before we can talk of the love of Satan
> without raising eyebrows and people thinking we are mad. But we must start
> somewhere. And I start here.
> Jack Skellington's love is amazing, thoughtful, unselfish, liberating,
> mature and wise. So is Satan's. I count it as a huge blessing in my life.