It's philosophically impure.
Goth is obsessed with darkness, death, etc., so Goth is contradictory to coming out of darkness into the light (which is the quote they use).
Maybe it's an acceptable alternative for those with kids who are fighting to wear Goth style just for the sake of style.
I don't know.
I think one thing to keep in mind is that few people who are goth stay that way long term.
It is something they experiment with and may identify with for a period, but often move on from.
However, I can't see the goth lifestyle and thought processes being compatible long term with any life, especially a Christian one.
I can understand Christians going through a goth phase and goths becoming Christians.
This site could minister to them and some of the articles appear to be support for those goth Christians who have been "rejected" by the church for their appearance and attitudes.
And that is often the unifying feature of goth, their common rejection by the "norms" of society.
I believe they are one example of the rejected and marginalized people that Christ ministered to in his time on earth.
I don't think we should always expect an instant turnaround of lifestyles and attitudes once someone becomes a Christian.
My daughter wanted to wear Goth clothes and stuff.
I wouldn't allow her.
As it turned out, she gave up on it and it never escalated after the first few weeks.
However, if it had turned into a monumental power struggle, I might have allowed her to wear Christian Goth.
It might have allowed her to get it out of her system without actually going full-Goth. I can't say that would have been acceptable because it never came to that.
I'm just speculating a bit.
Goth and Christianity are philosophically incompatible, but then I would have said Christianity and heavy metal were incompatible, too -- and I was proved wrong by Iron Butterfly and Petra. ;)
Well said. Jesus dealt with and continues to deal with all kinds of people, including maybe even people like me and you. Perhaps if we listened just a little bit more instead of trying to shoot from the lip at times, God might just surprise us....:love2:
A friend of mine gave me the In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, album back in '70. My dad took a look at it and told me to take it back to him. Today I have it on my iPod. There are times that I just can't get it out of my head. :BangHead: I know it's a sad life. :sleep:
Well, nobody knows for sure, and it was probably only one member who was a Christian.
I was just kidding about them.
Their most famous song, "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida", was "In the Garden of Eden".
The rumor was that Doug Ingle was drunk and slurred the words, which led to the way the title ended up.
I don't buy that, but nobody has 'fessed up one way or another.
If you listen to Doug Ingle's organ solos, etc., it seems pretty obvious he used to play church organ.
There's a Simpson's episode where (I think Bart switches the music) the church sings "In the Garden of Eden" as a hymn (it's the same song but with a "fixed" title).
It's a 17 minute song, so it lends itself to some good sight gags.