Your comment made me think about something: When Jesus was on the cross dying and the two thiefes were next to him, one of them made fun of him and screamed that, if he is the Son of God, he should show everyone and free them. While the other thief apologised to Jesus for his sin and his only wish was that Jesus may remember him to what Jesus said that they will meet again in heaven. The thing about this story, that I just realized, is, that Jesus never said anything bad to the thief that mocked him on the cross. He did not tell him that he'll go to hell, he did not tell him that he needs to believe to be freed from all sin. Jesus just talked to the thief that believed in him, but never despised the thief that did not. While literally dying and being mocked, Jesus did not burst out in anger, but showed love.
@@TheMusicLauncherLove shows correction. Jesus didn't need to tell the thief on the cross of his sin because the thief already knew of his sin. Jesus warned many and many people of their sin and told them that He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and no one comes to the Father except through Him.
@TheMusicLauncher Yes, so that we may find in Him eternal life. Jesus dying on the cross was to take our debt but only through Him which means we can't just sin as much as we want and say, well Jesus died for me so yeah you are right but we still have to repent.
@ndo533 If you are implying that this is the basis for the trinity then you're joking. The trinity was there before the Norse. The trinity of Hinduism and some concepts from greek philosophy and roman religion are more comparable than this.
@@josephnarvaez9507 if you mean the concept of the trinity, then you’re correct. If you mean the concept of Christian trinity then you’re wrong bc the Poetic Edda dates back before the rise of Christianity
I really love the parallels between Oden and Jesus. Both are dying up on a tree, but for entirely opposite reasons. Odin is there for his lust for power knowledge and selfish ambition. Whereas Jesus is up there for unrelenting love and selflessness, things Odin can’t fathom.
@@albertbecerra Jesus of Nazareth was a cultist who rebelled against the Roman Empire and was executed for it. Jesus Christ is the thing that his sycophants made up to cope with that defeat.
Considering how modern media mocks Jesus Christ and Christianity, I thought this was going to be no different. But I'd like to think this was a respectful and accurate depiction of Jesus' love, mercy and power.
Not gonna lie, this version of Odin is probably the best illustrated: A paranoid old man full of tricks dreading the day his time is finally up and afraid of being replaced with the next God in line. For a God that thrives off death and worship, it's a scary thought.
You mean he gets replaced by the true GOD , in the faith of Jesus all those “gods “ are fallen angels and or nephilim giants and their leaders are ofc satan so he just got a glimpse of his demise at the hands of Jesus
That's Odin alright. A lot of pop culture overly romanticizes him but in the end, Ragnarok is brought about because Odin, in his heart and soul, is a coward and weakling that surrounds himself with dumb brutes and murderous psychopaths.
@@aayewhyy Silly considering those "gods" have no idea of who fallen angels or nephilim or Satan even are, and that's just what Christians do to rationalize their God as the only one. Like claiming Zeus, Odin, or even Osiris were angels or giants is just silly.
@@EmptyMan000 sure they don’t , they are demons irl bud catch up to reality 😂🤣 it’s sad that you’d believe a pegan over GOD HIMSELF sayin it that’s tuff
The best part of all this, is that Odin. In his 3 forms. Is terrified.Terrified of a God who is apparently defeated, but who he knows is more alive than ever Terrified because he knows he is going to lose the war, that he will be defeated and that he has no chance of defeating this new god And this new God does not see him with hatred, resentment or arrogance. Instead, seeing him terrified, he takes him with sweetness and feels compassion for him. The wise, the warrior, the powerful god who sought omnipotence with all his might. In the end he will be defeated by a loving god.
@@JackInColorado Who are you to deny the deeper message and/or feelings tied to this moment? You can choose to only see face value. Some of us see beyond this.
Deep chills. ESPECIALLY since you see Jesus, seemingly empathetically, touch Odins cheek like "I know you, I see you, I forgive you, its ok". Something Odin couldnt ever process: The One True God forgiving him
The best part is that when odin sees God, Jesus Christ of Nazareth, it was also biblical since odin was kneeling before Christ. Philippians 2: 10 10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth,
@@alexandersergalpsalm 182. Yhwh tells the gods they will be punished and die like mortals for corrupting humanity that they were given to govern in duet 32.
@@treadwell1917 It kinda reminds me of the verse "You believe in God. Good! Even the demons believe in God... And they tremble." Im paraphrasing since i don't remember the verse in full.
@@alexandersergal right. A lot of people miss that at Babel YHWY made gods each take one of the 70 nations that were divided. (Duet 32). But he punishes them for teaching mankind all sort of evils (psalm 182) and for the sins committed by their kin (Gen 6). These gods and their children begot the myths and legends of old. In other words these Norse gods, Egyptian gods, Sumerian apkalu, they were Elohim but were punished to die as mortals.
@@es8346 There is no single correct "understanding," otherwise religions would not have split into so many sects. If this "god" had wanted peace and no crimes to be committed in his name, he would have inspired an unambiguous text. Instead, all the deaths recounted have served as justification for all the Judeo-Christian and Islamic civilisations to commit their crimes. Even a little fellow like you, with the arrogance to believe you've understood better than the rest of humanity, cannot change the facts of history.
@@mansagarus9226 you will as Isaiah 45:23 23 Says By myself I have sworn; from my mouth has gone out in jrighteousness a word that shall not return: k‘To me every knee shall bow, every tongue shall swear allegiance.’1
It's too bad there couldn't have been more Christian-pagan syncreticism to save both religious traditions, like with Buddhism and folk religion in Asia. This is mostly thanks to Paul's emphasis on anti-polytheistic sentiment Edit: Also because of the extremely exclusive monotheism of the Old Testament, if it is to be acknowledged
@@johnphillips4776 Which is sad because the earliest Christian’s were fine studying Greek Myths and Philosophy, figures like Saint Patrick used Irish folk traditions to help the Irish understand Christian teachings… the best version of Christianity baptizes the good in cultures. 👍
In a retrospective meta narrative aspect, this scene was absolutely perfect. Christianity was the thing that killed the norse gods at the end in a sense, and independently of what else was going to eventually replace Odin, the fact that is a god who opposes most of his goals and attributions is very fitting
From Odin's perspective, Christianity was something he feared. He was a god of war and death. His followers both worshiped and revered him. Then he meets a new god who is both merciful and humble. The new god also didn't retaliate against his followers. The mortals killed this new god and instead of taking vengeance, he forgives them and let's them live. From Odin's point of view, the newer god was both alien and terrifying that he was able to replace the Norse gods yet his "kingdom" was dwarfed by mortal creations.
jesus was like: hey there mr frog youre not supposed to be here Edit: 1 month later 5.2k likes and the locals are arguing over christverse lore smh Can't have shit
@@christopherhilaire488 Plot twist - as Jesus took body from corrupted dying universe, he would probably die anyway if not killed, unless he actively miracle himself to not die. And while it would ruin a lot of thing - even Jesus dying of old age would break gates of hell, crush sword of death and generally open way to Heaven, as he was still Innocent Man and Incarnated God. The specific way of Death matters for other reasons, but Death and Satan were lost in the very moment of Incarnation.
People clown on Snyder for Christian references in his work, but you'd be stupid if you didn't include it in a story about Norse Gods. It makes it more valid. Look at the MCU, they have Thor running around the Earth and nobody ever brings up the fact that there's a mythological god existing in modern world. It makes it feel toothless if you don't acknowledge the parallels of two religions.
@@shadowx8145 hence why I said MCU, not Marvel. The MCU is a poor, toothless imitation of the original material. Marvel Comics, unlike the MCU, acknowledged many times the problems which would arise if Thor was to exist in modern world. The best story involving that is a one-off comic where Thor converses with a dying priest on his deathbed, trying to comfort him after the priest told he struggled with his faith after he first met Thor.
@@antona.8659 Closest thing we got was in Agents of SHIELD where there was a former Asgardian warrior who lived among humans and the group of ambitious humans seek his Berserker staff that would empower them into superhuman beings like him.
The mockery is for the bastardizations of it from the more popular religious groups such as evangelicals. Here in the US there are mega church pastors who are millionaires from conning their poor congregations with faith healing scams. Prosperity gospel is running a muck with pastors claiming that giving all your money to them make things better. There are maga church services idolizing Donald Trump and buying Trump bibles. Meanwhile the more accurate by the book teachings of Jesus are ignored in favor for what I've mentioned. Turning the other cheek, giving up all worldly possessions to follow Christ, Loving your neighbor as yourself, and a plethora of other teachings are tossed out the window so Im not surprised.
The All-Father. The God of 3 Minds. The Warrior, the Wanderer, the Wise. The Almighty. The God with 3 Prosopon. The Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit. One born of Treason and Scheming so that he and his son may live eternal. One born of Love and Mercy so that he and his son may share life eternal. Seeing the Christianization of the Norse will likely not be a primary focus of the show but notice how Leif is pursuing a more empathetic and merciful mindset and taking accountability for his past atrocities. Already there's a shift from ruthlessness to mercy.
Fun fact about this scene. This isn’t just Snyders fan fiction, there’s a historical precedent for this scene. In the 9th century, it was proving difficult to convert Norse societies to Christianity, so a book called Heliand (Old Saxon for Savior) was written to detail Christs life and compare and construct it to Odin, as a way of making the idea of Christ more palatable to the a Norse people. In the early Norse canon, Jesus was seen more as a new god in the pantheon of Norse gods, there to receive the torch of godhood. Once Christianity maintained roots in the Norse world, that canon was done away with for the actual Christian canon.
We have no idea from any primary source or archaeological evidence how difficult it was to convert the Norse to Christianity. * The Norse left almost no contemporary written records, and the chroniclers of the Prose and Poetic Eddas were writing centuries after the fact. We don't actually know how much anti-pagan bias might be included in the Eddas. Christian bias is presumed, and possibly true, but there is no evidence. The Eddas came from Iceland, which was more Norse than Scandanavia by that point, so it's possible the compiler (who was assembling oral traditions, not writing original works) was appealing to the old ways. * We do know Christian missionaries actively practiced syncretism, melding old religious beliefs with new ones. Specifically, Christian missionaries liked to draw parallels between Jesus and Baldur, who was seen as a pure-hearted god who like Jesus died and rose from the dead. Christian missionaries could indeed have incorporated Norse beliefs due to conversion resistance, but it's just as likely that it was simply more palatable for people to convert to a faith that contained familiar symbolism and practices. * It appears that by the time Scandanavia was seriously converting that they had lost faith in the old ways. Christianity had been making slow inroads due to trade and diplomatic contacts even before missionaries arrived in force. Christianity appealed to lower classes as it always did, by preaching the moral equivalency of lower classes with nobles and kings; 'the first shall be last and the last, first'. In the end, however, Norse kings decided that conversion to Christianity would open doors to trade, commerce and diplomacy that would be closed had they remained pagan. Once the royals converted their subjects followed suit, sometimes to ingratiate themselves with the now-converted elites, sometimes by force, sometimes to just 'get along' with their neighbors and sometimes out of genuine conviction.
In fact Norse Mythology was only written and archived by a Christian priest after the nords were christionized in order to preserve it. so he put references to the bible and god replacing them so it would not be heresy. There is no pure original written mythology perserved
@@jacobbaumgardner3406 I assume you mean the Eddas? They're two distinct texts. The Poetic Edda may well be earlier, but the Prose Edda was compiled by Snorri Sturlsen in the 11th century(ish) drawing on earlier Norse oral traditions and filtered through Snorri's rather unique personal lens. Christianity aside, Sturlsen was writing centuries after the pagan Norse era and was an unreliable narrator promoting a self-serving agenda. Regardless, the Prose Edda remains one of the two relatively complete texts written or compiled by Norse sources, and an important look at their culture. I never claimed the Eddas weren't written or don't exist, or that they're not a major influence on Twilight of the Gods in general. They are. However, this particular scene with Odin and Jesus did not occur in either of the Eddas. I intended to put the sources in context, and apparently failed to do so clearly. My apologies.
I love that the Wikipedia page for this episode describes this scene as "A world that has forgotten Odin." which doubles as a link that redirects to the Christianity page.
This actually made me feel awestruck. Too often modern media portrays Norse Paganism as the protagonist with Christians being the villains, contradicting a lot of historical events to do so. Seeing Jesus paralleling Odin on the cross, then coming down from the cross to comfort him is not only accurate I think, but heartwarming. Even an arrogant man like Odin is forgiven by Lord Jesus.
I like how this actually aligns pretty well with how Christians of that era viewed paganism and the other gods. Back then, it was far more acceptable to believe other pantheons existed, but our God beat them. And a more contemporary version is that the pagan gods existed but were just demons, but that’s another rabbit hole.
The word for "god" in the Old Testament is "elohim" and can refer to false gods, to angels, or to demons. The old gods were (and are) fallen angels. People like @clairestark9024 are proof that they are real, and they're making a comeback as Scandinavia becomes more secularized.
I too, believe pagan gods are demons. Baal in the Bible is a demon, but Baal is Canaanite for “Lord”. “Lord” WHO? Hadad. Baal Hadad is in the Bible. Hadad is to Zeus as Zeus is to Jupiter. Zeus is a demon. Zeus is also the king of everything/ALL. The god “Pan”. Pan means “all”. Pan and Zeus are one. Baphomet looks a lot like Pan, don’t you think? They’re all the same deity, the same fallen angel.
@@lucasshill8780 yep. I mean I can go even further. Notice how Baphomet is a hermaphrodite? Ignoring that Hermaphrodite is actually a Greek deity, lord Shiva from Hinduism is sometimes portrayed as a hermaphrodite.
It is absolutely refreshing to see media depict Jesus as He truly is. A wise, merciful and caring savior. His Kingdom shall know no end may He reign evermore.
@@hittyheader5803 Considering he wasn't even properly crucified, no. A crucifixion takes weeks. If he really was a demigod, then his sacrifice is moot, as he was a supernatural being.
@@kylelapointe2289 i searched on google and found out it takes 6 hours or 4 days (Source from PubMed) and another source(Guardian) said it should not take more than 24 hours. And he is NOT a demigod but instead the Lord God himself For God became man, so he could take the sin of man and destroy it
I don't remember Jesus bowing to Odin? In all seriousness, I find it so funny how Christians pretend like their God is any different to any of the Gods that came before it. Odin and Jesus were ideas of beings that might have existed and were likely influenced by a specific person/people. That is all.
Jesus also weilded a hammer (as he was a carpenter), had immense strength (took on punishment and carried the weight of the world) and is all wise and all knowing AND is the true All-Father.
Christ is the condensation of the all the gods, because He is the source of all. Due to that, he is able to judge them, which is exactly what he did at the Cross and the Resurrection. People who participate in His life (Christians) will also judge the gods (referred too as angels/principalities in scripture but same thing) and take their thrones, as Christ is putting all things under his feet. These are what Saints are. All those gods will be held to account and answer for the suffering and tyranny they have inflicted on humanity.
@@drooskie9525 Easy to say now that he is overthrown the other faiths. I'm pretty sure pagans certainly don't see Jesus as the source of all nor their gods as simples angels. As for judgement, who's going to judge the christian god for the numerous times he caused genocides ? The murder of children ? The razing of cities ? Who's going to judge him for all the sufferings and tyranny he inflicted on humanity ?
Odin: Went to extreme lengths to prevent his death and defeat, and actually inadvertently *causes* both of them in the process Jesus: Willingly went to his own death, and only won *because* he was "defeated" Nice parallels here!
@@DarkAdonisVyers Your hatred and vitriol are strong for a man who has no belief. Your disposition is as that directed at a hated enemy. Not an 'idea' you find fictional. Maybe you should look inward. If you believe Jesus, who lives forever and went to his death, is false... why your hatred? Ask yourself that. "If he's not real; If he's just a story people tell, why do I hate him so much? Why do I devote such time as to try and discredit him every way I can? Why do I invest hours of my life trying to destroy this fictional story?" You don't dedicate yourself like this against Flat Earthers, you don't dedicate yourself like this against Mormons or the Islamic. You literally even crafted your profile around 'dark' as I way to separate yourself from the light. That's fanatical. I think, personally, somewhere deep in your heart, you believe in God more than most, and you rebel and hate the idea, which is why you so violently and actively rebel. Because this isn't 'something that's not right', it's something that you fear. Everything you've shown is a fear response.
It makes sense. In real life history north mythology dies out and Christianity replaces it and many come to the saving knowledge of Christ. Jesus the God-Man.
It didn't "die out". Scandinavia and the Baltic was converted largely at the edge of a sword. "Dying out" implies it just faded away, it didn't. Believers were killed, until it was forced into the fringes of society.
I know what you mean by North, but it's funny how a Christian missionary also tried to "convert" folks of the tribal North Sentinel Island and got shot
@@extraaccount4852 Extra funny when you realize that the Norse king who sold out his culture to the Christians was aptly named Cnut. The jokes write themselves.
He never said He is god. This is the syncretism of paganism in the bible. Hitgalut 3:12/14 (Manuscripts Oo.1.16) מי שמנצח אכתוב עליו השם מאלהי והשם מירושלים החדש העיר אלהי שיבא מהשמים להארץ מאלהי וגם שמי החדש" Whoever wins, I will write on him the name of my Elohah and the name of the new Yerushalyim, the city of my Elohah that will come from heaven to the land of my Elohah, and also my new name. (...) ולהמלאך מהעדה לאדיצא כתוב כה אמר אמן העד נאמן התחלה מהבריאות And to the messenger of the assembly of Laoditzeah (Laodicea), write: Thus says the Amen, the faithful witness, the beginning of creation. You can also write amen as the same way of oman (אמן) that means architect, and the bible has many of these word parallels that Yeshua used to teach. The word gospels derive from the word meat basar (בשר), and this is why He said: The one who doesn't eat my fresh...
@@clarkabeast8136because his not made to be accurate, is just simple as that, is not a new things someone taking some character from a mythology and changing they for their story, exemple of that is Maxie Zeus from the batman comics. Besides every now and than theres a accurate depiction of thor and odin and other norse mythology character.
@@clarkabeast8136 This is nothing new you know. Each Generation, Each Mind, Each Individual, has his or her own take on everything. To say that even THIS version is at all accurate would be false.
@@MalekitGJ Honestly, i feel that would crush anyone: having your legacy usurped by someone you'll never even meet, making your entire existence, your fears, struggle, love, ideals all feel inconsequential. Not even fading away to time, but by being shoved aside.
While all other Gods and Goddesses across Pantheons personified as Elements of the Cosmos themselves such as War, Lust, Wealth, Beauty, Luck, Fire, Storm, Death, Strength, Nature, Stars or Precognitions, none of them is more greater and all-powerful than *Love* itself, and Jesus Christ is Love. He represents Moral, compassion, and forgiveness. The goodness of all Humanity. *He is the Heart of God that took form of a man.* And Odin will ultimately lose.
Not just love, remember that the pharaoh was humbled by an eclipse, basically God outshining Ra. So Odin must be aware that God exists, that an all powerful being, existence itself made manifest exists. And instead of battling against it, it becomes human, frail, vulnerable, mortal, and shows him, Odin, compassion. He's not even a rival.
@@DarkAdonisVyers "But as for these enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slaughter them before me.'" Luke 19:27 So it shall be on the day of the Lord's visitation.
Yeshua is not your king. If He is, stop admiring other gods because He never did this. It is a transgression of the first commandment, admire other gods. But you guys only say that follow Yeshua to appear spiritual to society, something He also said about the Pharisees.
This made me cry. I'm reminded that this is how Jesus is to all of us. A loving, compassionate, and merciful God. Someone who always has His arms wide open to receive us when we come to Him. I always pray that everyone would come to know this loving God, who fills my life with so much love, hope, peace, and life. Jesus is knocking on your hearts, always ready to welcome you. We'll all meet Him if we would look past the pride that covers our eyes.
@@tapiwamuchenje734 twilight of the gods. It’s on netflix. The animation can be a turn off for some people (myself included at first) but I strongly recommend it. Magic is animated beautifully
“That If I met the idea of sacrifice in a Pagan story I didn’t mind it at all: again, that if I met the idea of a god sacrificing himself to himself I liked it very much and was mysteriously moved by it: again that the idea of the dying and reviving god similarly moved me provided I met it anywhere except the Gospels. The reason was that in Pagan stories I was prepared to feel the myth as profound and suggestive of meanings beyond my grasp even tho’ I could not say in cold prose ‘what it meant’. The story of Christ is simply a true myth. A myth working on us in the same way as the others, but with this tremendous difference that it really happened: and one must be content to accept it in the same way, remembering that it is God’s myth where the others are men’s myth: i.e., the pagan stories are God expressing himself through the minds of poets, using such images as He found there, while Christianity is God expressing himself through what we call ‘real things’” - C.S. Lewis.
Theocracy is the worst of all governments. If we must have a tyrant, a robber baron is far better than an inquisitor. The baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity at some point be sated; and since he dimly knows he is doing wrong he may possibly repent. But the inquisitor who mistakes his own cruelty and lust of power and fear for the voice of Heaven will torment us infinitely because he torments us with the approval of his own conscience and his better impulses appear to him as temptations. -C. S. Lewis.
@@DSkehan2004 He's more of a myth than the others. Like the other myths, his stories conjure fantastical stories of magic and power, but where the deities of polythieistic faiths are flawed individuals who do not possess all the powers to change reality. He does - he is said to be all-powerful, all-knowing, and loving, and yet terrible things continue to happen to people. The polytheistic faiths realized that you cannot reconcile such powers with the reality that we live in, but the Abrahamic faiths refuse to see that.
I understood its meaning: it is about Jesus being the only god remembered by everyone and about Odin and the Norse gods being forgotten by people when the Norse era and their reign ends since they are pagan gods and Jesus Christ is the only true and almighty god.
If it was just about that, then Odin wouldn't have knelt before the might of Jesus, he became weak and felt so small just at the sight of Jesus, which means He just saw the true God, his Creator and I'm sure that's what made him tremble in fear 🤌🏿
It's not even really about whether or not Jesus is "the one true God", it's more so about Odin realizing that he isn't as eternal as he thought. For a god that had ruled since the beginning of time, it would be horrifying to discover that humans would soon abandon Odin. Even worse, but that the new religion would even begin to be overshadowed by modernism (hence the towering skyscrapers over the church). He realized that all his power, all of his years, meant nothing because he wasn't truly eternal. Humans would outgrow the gods. It's one of the major themes of the show.
I mean, there's still the Hindu gods. Lot of people still worship them. Wouldn't really matter to Odin since it's not like he ever got a following in India, but Big J and Daddy Dearest is hardly the only god still worshiped in the modern age. And, to @V3ctor_Tude 's comment, he isn't on his knees because he's seeing a "true" god, but because he's seeing his own failure. He's seeing that he fails in a way greater than he ever could have imagined, not just dead but forgotten and replaced. Earlier Leif talks about how men may die but death in battle brings glory eternal, and Odin is seeing that the glory of his death will itself die swiftly. For a guy as storied and conniving as Odin, that's a real kick in the dick.
Fascinating concept! Odin, as a symbol of Norse mythology and its warrior ethos, represents the old world of gods shaped by power and fate. In contrast, Jesus introduces a radical new message of love, forgiveness, and grace that transcends the cycle of violence. The idea of these two figures meeting highlights a profound shift in worldview-from strength and sacrifice in battle to self-sacrifice for others. It’s a powerful reflection on the twilight of the old gods as a new light dawns through Christ.
Unironically, Jesus is pointed to, as The Destroyer of gods. Seeing as we believe Jesus IS THE Highest God, The Creator Incarnate, this.... actually seems well done.
@@Hero_Bryan False gods. Yes, I agree with ya! Ngl I expected a nasty comment just like with most of these comment sections, but hey, here it is actually quite nice.
@@Hero_Bryan You're making a category error. there's many gods. but God in the christian context is the Absolute/the One, creator of all, which you can find examples of in people like Aristotle and Plato. gods like odin, thor, zeus, and so on are still created beings. important to recognize this.
@@gannielukks1811 god yes. God not really, as clearly he is finite, and potentially mortal being. Not omnipotent, not omnipresent. Not God by capital G.
I was surprised that Jesus wasnt mocked at this, i grow sicked of the media mocking Jesus very more often but not the other religion. Then i ask my self why?
@sarcomera go read a book muslims love and respect jesus and his is most respect it the muslims community we don't make statues of him naked and insulting him in front of a muslim would probably get u hurt and he will be always more close to us than u And what's funny is that u Bragg about western power napoleon and ceasar but ended up worshiping a meddle Eastern man who had nothing to do with u looks like faith has sense of humour
This rings especially true with me, as after lapsing out of Christianity at a young age, I turned to the neo-pagan movement in my early teens, specifically the Norse branch. Tell old me that Christ would replace Odin like in this short and he'd call you downright insane. Christ is king.
Praise the Lord for you coming back to Christ! And also, I thought this was some animated RUclips video, not something on Netflix, so honestly, REALLY cool!
Seeing Jesus stepping down from the cross and looking down on a principality called Odin- the All-father and most powerful icon shown in cinemas is dope 🔥🔥 Odin was deeply terrified and believed he would be destroyed, however the real God (Jesus) who created Odin looks at Odin with pity and love
@@johnskuse441 "the real God (Jesus) who created Odin looks at Odin with pity and love" literally adding his own religious beliefs into the scene. The scene isn't even trying to state that Jesus is more powerful or that he's the one true God. That's just Christians forcing their view point down everything. do you struggle to read or are you just slow?
@@johnskuse441 ok. how is it being depicted? you're literally so brainwashed that you're making stuff up. nowhere in the scene does it even suggest that Jesus is the one true God so exactly where are y'all getting that from?
@@mago2839it's fine. What's annoying is Christians acting like this is something religious or pro-Christ when it's just a thematic way of showing the Norse Gods and by extension Odin will be forgotten and not worshipped with the parallel of Christians destroying pagan worship sights.
Funnily enough There COULD actually be a connection to Norse mythology and Christianity where after Ragnarok it’s said that there would be 2 mortal beings left, Lif and Lifthransir which could be the Norse names of Adam and Eve in this universe I could be wrong though
Remember most of the information we have on Norse mythos comes post-Christinization where historians often rewrote the stories to fit in with Christianity. Generally if something fits too well that means it's a fake.
@@SpiderkillersInc We can't say for certain. Other pagan myths, namely Celtic ones, underwent an entire rewrite where it's now unclear what was "original" and what was "new". Given that information, I'd assume that it leans a bit closer to "rewrite" than slightly influenced.
Every knee will bend to the one on the Most High. For God is Love, and his Son has done the impossible. Fun Fact; It not the Cross that killed him, its the Broken Heart he got when The Son took The Sins.
@@forresthunt9573 If I fall on my ass, then I'm not on my knees. If you say that I _must_ kneel, then you are revealing the lie of Yahweh's "gift" of "free will".
Remember God said, ‘I am the First and I am the Last; Besides Me there is no God.' He is the only God. The fear he saw, seeing all powerful but merciful God. He thought he was at the top, but there was another.
@@Hard_Boiled_Entertainment It literally is, tho, Superman is no Jesus analog and to make him one is cringe, and him murdering Zod was piss-poorly done and out of character, same with how Batman was "handled", the grimm and gritty vibe he was aiming for was mid. But sure whatever ya say, bozo 🤡👍
@@stewystewymc3929 Same way He did in real life. Reveal himself to be the Son of God, die, ressurect, leave, indirectly lead a worldwide sweep againts pagan religions through his apostles, and then through his apostle's disciples and their disciples' disciples and so forth.
@@na-Baron Christianity did not defeat Asian religions. Shinto, Taoism, Hindu and Buddhism are still the minority religions in their territories. The replacement of paganism with Christianity and the failure of Christians to expand into Asia was due to politics. Jesus did not make any revolt, it was the Roman politics of that period that chose Christianity for its own purposes.
i love the thematic element of odin basically seeing that he will be doomed to irrelevance and whatever, but when i tell you that i burst out laughing when is watched this scene that is an understatement, it caught me so off guard
Lord Jesus Christ, the Only Begotten Son of God, born of the Father before all ages. God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father; through him all things were made. For us men and for our salvation he came down from heaven, and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and became man. For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate, he suffered death and was buried, and rose again on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures. He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and his kingdom will have no end.
Fact: Odin was just a man originating from the eastern steppe region, he led a portion of turks and scythian tribes to anatolia and then he settled his personal tribes among germania and gaul who became the Alans. The Alans joined with the gauls to form the huns and the franks under charlemagne. Atilla was most likely one of a number of descendants to Odin. Atilla's origin and story also parallels Charlemagne. The sword of Mars which Atilla wields looks just like the legendary Joyeuse wielded by Charlemagne.
I really like this because it shows the true death of a god. Not by battle or by destruction, but the world simply abandoning them and moving on. Being killed is one thing, but being forgotten is a worse fate for such a being.
@@DarkAdonisVyers I don’t think the schematics matter for the purposes of the Aesir. The point is they are forgotten and unworshipped, and like the Vanir will slowly rot away, Ragnarok or not.
@@Lovesomebotes In theory, yes. In practice, no. For example, the Manchurians allowed the conquered Han Chinese to keep their own local folk religions, so long as they bowed to the new Empire. That's why when the Taiping Rebellion occurred. Many of the Han Chinese fought _for_ the Manchurian Qing Empire because they knew that the Taiping Christians would purge the local religions should they take power.
@@dionemoolman Yes, it does. Christianity didn't rise to power because Jesus was meek and mild and allegedly came back to life. It wrote to power because the Church murdered or otherwise penalized those who didn't convert. Yahweh's lapdogs are pieces of shit.
Philippians 2:10-11 "so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."
It's Odin and christianity brought so much suffering to mankind, how can people be this narrow-minded? So many christians in history didn't even follow what Jesus tried to teach, they were greedy control freaks, not better than the vikings...
@@Hello-bi1pm No he doesn't, he literally never has. The nonsensical accusation that "Zack Snyder is a Randian" simply comes from the fact that he once expressed interest in making a film adaptation of The Fountainhead, but he indefinitely shelved the idea in 2016 because of the heated political discourse at the time, which still goes on just as fervently today.
@@thelordofthelostbraincells Well, as you may or may not know, Zack Snyder has a tendency towards adding a bit of religious imagery into a lot of his films, typically by portraying at least one character in a messianic light(Man of Steel for example), weather it fits/makes sense or not. Here it actually really does fit, with this whole vision being essentially a highlight reel of the fall of the viking civilization and the Norse pantheon as a whole, being superseded by Christianity in the region. At least, that's what I think.
It's awesome how Odin meets the God that will replace him and is overwhelmed by the fact that he is shown mercy without arrogance
Your comment made me think about something: When Jesus was on the cross dying and the two thiefes were next to him, one of them made fun of him and screamed that, if he is the Son of God, he should show everyone and free them. While the other thief apologised to Jesus for his sin and his only wish was that Jesus may remember him to what Jesus said that they will meet again in heaven.
The thing about this story, that I just realized, is, that Jesus never said anything bad to the thief that mocked him on the cross. He did not tell him that he'll go to hell, he did not tell him that he needs to believe to be freed from all sin. Jesus just talked to the thief that believed in him, but never despised the thief that did not.
While literally dying and being mocked, Jesus did not burst out in anger, but showed love.
@@TheMusicLauncherLove shows correction. Jesus didn't need to tell the thief on the cross of his sin because the thief already knew of his sin. Jesus warned many and many people of their sin and told them that He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and no one comes to the Father except through Him.
@TheMusicLauncher Yes, so that we may find in Him eternal life. Jesus dying on the cross was to take our debt but only through Him which means we can't just sin as much as we want and say, well Jesus died for me so yeah you are right but we still have to repent.
@@TheMusicLauncher That's a really good point, I never thought of that.
I wander what the native American gods thought of Jesus when they saw him
I Love how Odin experiences Ragnarok from all three versions of himself. The Warrior. The Wanderer. The Wise.
I like they didn’t make this into some alien nonsense but stuck to mythology
@@xyanneabat9493the father, the son, the holy ghost? Sound familiar?
@ndo533 If you are implying that this is the basis for the trinity then you're joking. The trinity was there before the Norse. The trinity of Hinduism and some concepts from greek philosophy and roman religion are more comparable than this.
@@wolfsbanealphas617 agree
@@josephnarvaez9507 if you mean the concept of the trinity, then you’re correct. If you mean the concept of Christian trinity then you’re wrong bc the Poetic Edda dates back before the rise of Christianity
I really love the parallels between Oden and Jesus. Both are dying up on a tree, but for entirely opposite reasons. Odin is there for his lust for power knowledge and selfish ambition. Whereas Jesus is up there for unrelenting love and selflessness, things Odin can’t fathom.
also two different takes on the phrase "sacrificing himself to himself"
And both just a myth...😉
@@EasternJanitorialEmploymentJesus christ is a historical figure 😉
@@albertbecerra Jesus of Nazareth was a cultist who rebelled against the Roman Empire and was executed for it. Jesus Christ is the thing that his sycophants made up to cope with that defeat.
@@DarkAdonisVyers there is no historical document proving he "rebelled" against the Roman empire
I noticed how Odin flinched at the light Jesus had. It was just overwhelming for him.
Fitting really isn't it?
The light to forgive all of humanity sin is too much for him to comprehend.
who is jesus? the son of god in the flesh
what is jesus? the love of god infinitum
@@360.Tapestry well said! Lovely comment before the work day.
@@Mannwhich Nah, muh jebus is the lamest deity ever created by humans.
Considering how modern media mocks Jesus Christ and Christianity, I thought this was going to be no different. But I'd like to think this was a respectful and accurate depiction of Jesus' love, mercy and power.
The love of Jesus nearly exterminated my entire people.
@@DreamersOfReality who are your people might I ask?
Zack really did a good job here 🎉
@@DreamersOfRealitypathetic
@@DreamersOfRealityyou dont have a people. INRI
Not gonna lie, this version of Odin is probably the best illustrated: A paranoid old man full of tricks dreading the day his time is finally up and afraid of being replaced with the next God in line. For a God that thrives off death and worship, it's a scary thought.
You mean he gets replaced by the true GOD , in the faith of Jesus all those “gods “ are fallen angels and or nephilim giants and their leaders are ofc satan so he just got a glimpse of his demise at the hands of Jesus
That's Odin alright. A lot of pop culture overly romanticizes him but in the end, Ragnarok is brought about because Odin, in his heart and soul, is a coward and weakling that surrounds himself with dumb brutes and murderous psychopaths.
@@aayewhyy Silly considering those "gods" have no idea of who fallen angels or nephilim or Satan even are, and that's just what Christians do to rationalize their God as the only one. Like claiming Zeus, Odin, or even Osiris were angels or giants is just silly.
@@EmptyMan000 sure they don’t , they are demons irl bud catch up to reality 😂🤣 it’s sad that you’d believe a pegan over GOD HIMSELF sayin it that’s tuff
@@aayewhyy No IS Just one more god in other 100000000
The best part of all this, is that Odin. In his 3 forms. Is terrified.Terrified of a God who is apparently defeated, but who he knows is more alive than ever Terrified because he knows he is going to lose the war, that he will be defeated and that he has no chance of defeating this new god And this new God does not see him with hatred, resentment or arrogance. Instead, seeing him terrified, he takes him with sweetness and feels compassion for him. The wise, the warrior, the powerful god who sought omnipotence with all his might. In the end he will be defeated by a loving god.
Odin just saw his future where he will get replaced by someone else.
@@ISHKAR777 bro made it too deep when it was just replacing of faith due to christianization of scandinavia
@@JackInColorado Who are you to deny the deeper message and/or feelings tied to this moment? You can choose to only see face value. Some of us see beyond this.
@@JackInColoradoLMAO for real
As a practicing Christian myself, you hit the nail on the head so hard it broke the wall.
Deep chills. ESPECIALLY since you see Jesus, seemingly empathetically, touch Odins cheek like "I know you, I see you, I forgive you, its ok". Something Odin couldnt ever process: The One True God forgiving him
The best part is that when odin sees God, Jesus Christ of Nazareth, it was also biblical since odin was kneeling before Christ.
Philippians 2: 10
10 that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth,
@@alexandersergalpsalm 182. Yhwh tells the gods they will be punished and die like mortals for corrupting humanity that they were given to govern in duet 32.
Amen. ❤
@@treadwell1917 It kinda reminds me of the verse "You believe in God. Good! Even the demons believe in God... And they tremble." Im paraphrasing since i don't remember the verse in full.
@@alexandersergal right. A lot of people miss that at Babel YHWY made gods each take one of the 70 nations that were divided. (Duet 32). But he punishes them for teaching mankind all sort of evils (psalm 182) and for the sins committed by their kin (Gen 6). These gods and their children begot the myths and legends of old. In other words these Norse gods, Egyptian gods, Sumerian apkalu, they were Elohim but were punished to die as mortals.
He met a god who overcome death. One who does not seek war, but showed us love and wisdom to his people.
He did a lot more than that when he got tacked up on that cross.
@@lucasrackley250это конечно интересно но нахуя здесь иссус
Who does not seek war? Have you read your Bible? Your Coran? Your Torah? Have you read history?
@@lexysraymont9627 no te has enterado de nada.
@@es8346 There is no single correct "understanding," otherwise religions would not have split into so many sects. If this "god" had wanted peace and no crimes to be committed in his name, he would have inspired an unambiguous text. Instead, all the deaths recounted have served as justification for all the Judeo-Christian and Islamic civilisations to commit their crimes. Even a little fellow like you, with the arrogance to believe you've understood better than the rest of humanity, cannot change the facts of history.
Odin saw the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end lmao
Aint that the truth 🙂↕️✋🏽
Amen ✝️
And knelt like everyone else will
@@wolfsbanealphas617I won’t
@@mansagarus9226 you will as Isaiah 45:23
23 Says By myself I have sworn;
from my mouth has gone out in jrighteousness
a word that shall not return:
k‘To me every knee shall bow,
every tongue shall swear allegiance.’1
Here we see Odin dabbling in the Vikings’ favorite pastime: converting to Christianity.
The most time-honored tradition of pagans: Being born again.
Billions will baptize.
It's too bad there couldn't have been more Christian-pagan syncreticism to save both religious traditions, like with Buddhism and folk religion in Asia. This is mostly thanks to Paul's emphasis on anti-polytheistic sentiment
Edit: Also because of the extremely exclusive monotheism of the Old Testament, if it is to be acknowledged
@@johnphillips4776 Which is sad because the earliest Christian’s were fine studying Greek Myths and Philosophy, figures like Saint Patrick used Irish folk traditions to help the Irish understand Christian teachings… the best version of Christianity baptizes the good in cultures. 👍
@@johnphillips4776We were right to reject Paganism.
A refreshingly positive portrayal of Jesus Christ and Christianity as whole that has been long absent from popular culture.
I'm an agnostic, but even I was pleased to see JC come across as positive.
Amen
In a retrospective meta narrative aspect, this scene was absolutely perfect. Christianity was the thing that killed the norse gods at the end in a sense, and independently of what else was going to eventually replace Odin, the fact that is a god who opposes most of his goals and attributions is very fitting
From Odin's perspective, Christianity was something he feared. He was a god of war and death. His followers both worshiped and revered him.
Then he meets a new god who is both merciful and humble. The new god also didn't retaliate against his followers. The mortals killed this new god and instead of taking vengeance, he forgives them and let's them live.
From Odin's point of view, the newer god was both alien and terrifying that he was able to replace the Norse gods yet his "kingdom" was dwarfed by mortal creations.
jesus was like: hey there mr frog
youre not supposed to be here
Edit: 1 month later 5.2k likes and the locals are arguing over christverse lore smh
Can't have shit
Me travelling back in time to save Jesus, only for him stare me right in the eyes and say "You're not supposed to be here" in perfect english.
@@AurelionSass he definitely would send your behind back 😂 if he never dies we all going to hell with no hope
@@christopherhilaire488 Plot twist - as Jesus took body from corrupted dying universe, he would probably die anyway if not killed, unless he actively miracle himself to not die. And while it would ruin a lot of thing - even Jesus dying of old age would break gates of hell, crush sword of death and generally open way to Heaven, as he was still Innocent Man and Incarnated God.
The specific way of Death matters for other reasons, but Death and Satan were lost in the very moment of Incarnation.
Look up "Caballo de Troya" by renowned paranormal investigator J.J. Benítez.
he more like had empathy
People clown on Snyder for Christian references in his work, but you'd be stupid if you didn't include it in a story about Norse Gods. It makes it more valid. Look at the MCU, they have Thor running around the Earth and nobody ever brings up the fact that there's a mythological god existing in modern world. It makes it feel toothless if you don't acknowledge the parallels of two religions.
Honestly, this is better than rebels moons despite the rebels moon battle scene
Aside from that the original edda’s had a lot of Christian influence into them, especially ragnarok.
Marvel has reference that many times in the comics fam.
@@shadowx8145 hence why I said MCU, not Marvel. The MCU is a poor, toothless imitation of the original material. Marvel Comics, unlike the MCU, acknowledged many times the problems which would arise if Thor was to exist in modern world. The best story involving that is a one-off comic where Thor converses with a dying priest on his deathbed, trying to comfort him after the priest told he struggled with his faith after he first met Thor.
@@antona.8659 Closest thing we got was in Agents of SHIELD where there was a former Asgardian warrior who lived among humans and the group of ambitious humans seek his Berserker staff that would empower them into superhuman beings like him.
Rare to see Christianity mentioned without mocking it these days in medias and shows, I'm suprised.
How pervasive is this "mocking" of Christianity since I keep on seeing it in Christianity
A surprise to be sure, but a welcome one
You know Snyder, he'll bring Christianity into anything ...
So instead they mock the norse gods?
The mockery is for the bastardizations of it from the more popular religious groups such as evangelicals. Here in the US there are mega church pastors who are millionaires from conning their poor congregations with faith healing scams. Prosperity gospel is running a muck with pastors claiming that giving all your money to them make things better. There are maga church services idolizing Donald Trump and buying Trump bibles. Meanwhile the more accurate by the book teachings of Jesus are ignored in favor for what I've mentioned. Turning the other cheek, giving up all worldly possessions to follow Christ, Loving your neighbor as yourself, and a plethora of other teachings are tossed out the window so Im not surprised.
I genuinely was not expecting Snyder to go there with this, Bravo.
He was all in with the Christic symbolism in superman. I'm not surprised here
@@rolletroll2338 Superman’s been a Christ allegory for ages, and before that he was a Moses allegory
@@Draftsman_MC1300 these Snyder haters are idiots bro
But Snyder loves Christian symbolism.
@@Z3ROMyth I mean, I only hate him because of what he did with batman, but he makes good movies overall
The All-Father. The God of 3 Minds. The Warrior, the Wanderer, the Wise.
The Almighty. The God with 3 Prosopon. The Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit.
One born of Treason and Scheming so that he and his son may live eternal.
One born of Love and Mercy so that he and his son may share life eternal.
Seeing the Christianization of the Norse will likely not be a primary focus of the show but notice how Leif is pursuing a more empathetic and merciful mindset and taking accountability for his past atrocities. Already there's a shift from ruthlessness to mercy.
You cooked
This is peak
But what about the athrocities made in the name of Jesus?
@@AngelEstrella-qb6or not just that but the explicit atrocities commanded in the old testament as well
@@AngelEstrella-qb6or
Every religions has made atrocities for their God/gods.
Knee status: bowed
Tongue status: confessed
LOUDER FOR THE ONES IN THE BACK🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥
but still the greatest test remains for us who gladly choose him now
@@cidklutch Well come, then, for now is the time to worship
Comment status: liked
Christpilled
Fun fact about this scene. This isn’t just Snyders fan fiction, there’s a historical precedent for this scene.
In the 9th century, it was proving difficult to convert Norse societies to Christianity, so a book called Heliand (Old Saxon for Savior) was written to detail Christs life and compare and construct it to Odin, as a way of making the idea of Christ more palatable to the a Norse people.
In the early Norse canon, Jesus was seen more as a new god in the pantheon of Norse gods, there to receive the torch of godhood. Once Christianity maintained roots in the Norse world, that canon was done away with for the actual Christian canon.
norse mythology is also heavily christianized from all sources we have of it
We have no idea from any primary source or archaeological evidence how difficult it was to convert the Norse to Christianity. * The Norse left almost no contemporary written records, and the chroniclers of the Prose and Poetic Eddas were writing centuries after the fact. We don't actually know how much anti-pagan bias might be included in the Eddas. Christian bias is presumed, and possibly true, but there is no evidence. The Eddas came from Iceland, which was more Norse than Scandanavia by that point, so it's possible the compiler (who was assembling oral traditions, not writing original works) was appealing to the old ways. * We do know Christian missionaries actively practiced syncretism, melding old religious beliefs with new ones. Specifically, Christian missionaries liked to draw parallels between Jesus and Baldur, who was seen as a pure-hearted god who like Jesus died and rose from the dead. Christian missionaries could indeed have incorporated Norse beliefs due to conversion resistance, but it's just as likely that it was simply more palatable for people to convert to a faith that contained familiar symbolism and practices. * It appears that by the time Scandanavia was seriously converting that they had lost faith in the old ways. Christianity had been making slow inroads due to trade and diplomatic contacts even before missionaries arrived in force. Christianity appealed to lower classes as it always did, by preaching the moral equivalency of lower classes with nobles and kings; 'the first shall be last and the last, first'. In the end, however, Norse kings decided that conversion to Christianity would open doors to trade, commerce and diplomacy that would be closed had they remained pagan. Once the royals converted their subjects followed suit, sometimes to ingratiate themselves with the now-converted elites, sometimes by force, sometimes to just 'get along' with their neighbors and sometimes out of genuine conviction.
@@robertharding5972 whether or not it was actually used, the book was written, it does exist, and this is what they are basing it off of.
In fact Norse Mythology was only written and archived by a Christian priest after the nords were christionized in order to preserve it. so he put references to the bible and god replacing them so it would not be heresy.
There is no pure original written mythology perserved
@@jacobbaumgardner3406 I assume you mean the Eddas? They're two distinct texts. The Poetic Edda may well be earlier, but the Prose Edda was compiled by Snorri Sturlsen in the 11th century(ish) drawing on earlier Norse oral traditions and filtered through Snorri's rather unique personal lens. Christianity aside, Sturlsen was writing centuries after the pagan Norse era and was an unreliable narrator promoting a self-serving agenda. Regardless, the Prose Edda remains one of the two relatively complete texts written or compiled by Norse sources, and an important look at their culture. I never claimed the Eddas weren't written or don't exist, or that they're not a major influence on Twilight of the Gods in general. They are. However, this particular scene with Odin and Jesus did not occur in either of the Eddas. I intended to put the sources in context, and apparently failed to do so clearly. My apologies.
I love that the Wikipedia page for this episode describes this scene as "A world that has forgotten Odin." which doubles as a link that redirects to the Christianity page.
That is great!
*Tolkien’s religious lore be like:*
This actually made me feel awestruck. Too often modern media portrays Norse Paganism as the protagonist with Christians being the villains, contradicting a lot of historical events to do so. Seeing Jesus paralleling Odin on the cross, then coming down from the cross to comfort him is not only accurate I think, but heartwarming. Even an arrogant man like Odin is forgiven by Lord Jesus.
accurate to what exactly?? accurate to the myths propagated by the Christian conquerers who Force converted the norse worshippers??
@@TecnofanbooyNah, for the most part the Norse embraced Christianity willingly and often for good reasons.
Holllywood really brainwashed a lot of people try researching actual history.@Tecnofanbooy
Odin isn't a man
@@Tecnofanbooyyou’re part of the problem.
I like how this actually aligns pretty well with how Christians of that era viewed paganism and the other gods. Back then, it was far more acceptable to believe other pantheons existed, but our God beat them.
And a more contemporary version is that the pagan gods existed but were just demons, but that’s another rabbit hole.
The word for "god" in the Old Testament is "elohim" and can refer to false gods, to angels, or to demons. The old gods were (and are) fallen angels. People like @clairestark9024 are proof that they are real, and they're making a comeback as Scandinavia becomes more secularized.
Odin is nimrod
I too, believe pagan gods are demons.
Baal in the Bible is a demon, but Baal is Canaanite for “Lord”.
“Lord” WHO? Hadad. Baal Hadad is in the Bible.
Hadad is to Zeus as Zeus is to Jupiter. Zeus is a demon. Zeus is also the king of everything/ALL.
The god “Pan”. Pan means “all”. Pan and Zeus are one. Baphomet looks a lot like Pan, don’t you think?
They’re all the same deity, the same fallen angel.
@@brandenmarcum430 Crazy connections, nice. It's insane how everything connects once you begin to really dive into the lore.
@@lucasshill8780 yep. I mean I can go even further. Notice how Baphomet is a hermaphrodite? Ignoring that Hermaphrodite is actually a Greek deity, lord Shiva from Hinduism is sometimes portrayed as a hermaphrodite.
It is absolutely refreshing to see media depict Jesus as He truly is. A wise, merciful and caring savior. His Kingdom shall know no end may He reign evermore.
Amen🙏
@@MichealKayode-rs8jy He is a Necromancer, and a coward.
@@kylelapointe2289would a coward get tortured and crucified for the sake of all of us?
@@hittyheader5803 Considering he wasn't even properly crucified, no. A crucifixion takes weeks. If he really was a demigod, then his sacrifice is moot, as he was a supernatural being.
@@kylelapointe2289 i searched on google and found out it takes 6 hours or 4 days
(Source from PubMed)
and another source(Guardian) said it should not take more than 24 hours.
And he is NOT a demigod but instead the Lord God himself
For God became man, so he could take the sin of man and destroy it
A super powerful human who poses as a god kneels before a God in human form.
Absolutely poetic ✍️
I don't remember Jesus bowing to Odin?
In all seriousness, I find it so funny how Christians pretend like their God is any different to any of the Gods that came before it. Odin and Jesus were ideas of beings that might have existed and were likely influenced by a specific person/people. That is all.
@@samanthaspinohuh....missed a mark or two i think. They God of Christianity is the same Jewish God. Why do you only ever talk about Christians?
@@anthonycurby4606 I mean, the pope and the crusaders made it more known than Judaism via conquest.
@@samanthaspino you think that you are intelligent because you are atheist
Jesus also weilded a hammer (as he was a carpenter), had immense strength (took on punishment and carried the weight of the world) and is all wise and all knowing AND is the true All-Father.
The father, the Son and the Holy Spirit
nope
Christ is the condensation of the all the gods, because He is the source of all. Due to that, he is able to judge them, which is exactly what he did at the Cross and the Resurrection. People who participate in His life (Christians) will also judge the gods (referred too as angels/principalities in scripture but same thing) and take their thrones, as Christ is putting all things under his feet. These are what Saints are. All those gods will be held to account and answer for the suffering and tyranny they have inflicted on humanity.
@@drooskie9525good if true
@@drooskie9525 Easy to say now that he is overthrown the other faiths. I'm pretty sure pagans certainly don't see Jesus as the source of all nor their gods as simples angels. As for judgement, who's going to judge the christian god for the numerous times he caused genocides ? The murder of children ? The razing of cities ? Who's going to judge him for all the sufferings and tyranny he inflicted on humanity ?
Odin: Went to extreme lengths to prevent his death and defeat, and actually inadvertently *causes* both of them in the process
Jesus: Willingly went to his own death, and only won *because* he was "defeated"
Nice parallels here!
According to his sycophants, anyway.
@@DarkAdonisVyers I don't think you know what that means
@@katawaya8101 Oh, I do.
@@DarkAdonisVyers Your hatred and vitriol are strong for a man who has no belief. Your disposition is as that directed at a hated enemy. Not an 'idea' you find fictional. Maybe you should look inward. If you believe Jesus, who lives forever and went to his death, is false... why your hatred? Ask yourself that. "If he's not real; If he's just a story people tell, why do I hate him so much? Why do I devote such time as to try and discredit him every way I can? Why do I invest hours of my life trying to destroy this fictional story?"
You don't dedicate yourself like this against Flat Earthers, you don't dedicate yourself like this against Mormons or the Islamic. You literally even crafted your profile around 'dark' as I way to separate yourself from the light. That's fanatical.
I think, personally, somewhere deep in your heart, you believe in God more than most, and you rebel and hate the idea, which is why you so violently and actively rebel. Because this isn't 'something that's not right', it's something that you fear.
Everything you've shown is a fear response.
@@katawaya8101 Don't listen to the rage bait, they'll never admit they're wrong.
It makes sense. In real life history north mythology dies out and Christianity replaces it and many come to the saving knowledge of Christ. Jesus the God-Man.
It didn't "die out". Scandinavia and the Baltic was converted largely at the edge of a sword. "Dying out" implies it just faded away, it didn't. Believers were killed, until it was forced into the fringes of society.
I know what you mean by North, but it's funny how a Christian missionary also tried to "convert" folks of the tribal North Sentinel Island and got shot
@@extraaccount4852 Extra funny when you realize that the Norse king who sold out his culture to the Christians was aptly named Cnut. The jokes write themselves.
He never said He is god. This is the syncretism of paganism in the bible.
Hitgalut 3:12/14 (Manuscripts Oo.1.16)
מי שמנצח אכתוב עליו השם מאלהי והשם מירושלים החדש העיר אלהי שיבא מהשמים להארץ מאלהי וגם שמי החדש"
Whoever wins, I will write on him the name of my Elohah and the name of the new Yerushalyim, the city of my Elohah that will come from heaven to the land of my Elohah, and also my new name.
(...)
ולהמלאך מהעדה לאדיצא כתוב כה אמר אמן העד נאמן התחלה מהבריאות
And to the messenger of the assembly of Laoditzeah (Laodicea), write: Thus says the Amen, the faithful witness, the beginning of creation.
You can also write amen as the same way of oman (אמן) that means architect, and the bible has many of these word parallels that Yeshua used to teach. The word gospels derive from the word meat basar (בשר), and this is why He said: The one who doesn't eat my fresh...
@@Bolaway it was understood by the apostles in the New Testament that Jesus is the Lord of Hosts
Finally a more accurate Thor and Odin comparison to the ones you see and told from Marvel
U had to be an idiot if u thought marvel was going for accurracy when they used the norse mythos
This series is also not accurate.
I know but it’s more realistic compare to Marvel’s Comics where they got rid of most of Thor’s history
@@clarkabeast8136because his not made to be accurate, is just simple as that, is not a new things someone taking some character from a mythology and changing they for their story, exemple of that is Maxie Zeus from the batman comics.
Besides every now and than theres a accurate depiction of thor and odin and other norse mythology character.
@@clarkabeast8136 This is nothing new you know. Each Generation, Each Mind, Each Individual, has his or her own take on everything. To say that even THIS version is at all accurate would be false.
Seeing yourself get replaced by the newest dominant religion has got to be soul crushing lmao.
what a typical narcissistic person would feel
@@ruzzelhurano ...
@@Hopemaxxing_For_My_Chairi mean, he is right.
Odin was highly narcissistic.
@@MalekitGJ OH, I thought he was calling ME that. Gosh, I did not read his comment in the right way 😅
@@MalekitGJ Honestly, i feel that would crush anyone: having your legacy usurped by someone you'll never even meet, making your entire existence, your fears, struggle, love, ideals all feel inconsequential. Not even fading away to time, but by being shoved aside.
Bro couldn’t handle the Majesty of the Lord. He was flabbergasted by the sheer Mercy and Grace of the Son of God.
Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.
❤
Jesus: I forgive you
Ultimate chad move
Amen to the one One on the Most High.
His grace is greater than our sin ❤🙏 if he is with us than who could stand against us?
@@Alejandro-fr9jc who created everything? who create sin
@@loke1555 that’s true, but tell me who committed the first sin?
Every knee will bend, every head will bow, every tongue will confess
What an evil saying.
@ he is king
@@Cgar-mj1on I only kneel before Gods. Never Kings.
@@LiamMacDIt’s only evil if taken out of context.
jesus isn't real
While all other Gods and Goddesses across Pantheons personified as Elements of the Cosmos themselves such as War, Lust, Wealth, Beauty, Luck, Fire, Storm, Death, Strength, Nature, Stars or Precognitions, none of them is more greater and all-powerful than *Love* itself, and Jesus Christ is Love. He represents Moral, compassion, and forgiveness. The goodness of all Humanity. *He is the Heart of God that took form of a man.* And Odin will ultimately lose.
Now if only people would stop trying to make war in his name
@@EbonFang_92 There is nothing wrong with just war, but pointless wars.
Cute to say, a shame reality doesn't reflect it.
@@vaderkurt7848 ask Ares or Kratos.
Not just love, remember that the pharaoh was humbled by an eclipse, basically God outshining Ra.
So Odin must be aware that God exists, that an all powerful being, existence itself made manifest exists.
And instead of battling against it, it becomes human, frail, vulnerable, mortal, and shows him, Odin, compassion.
He's not even a rival.
I am in awe. Finally some recognition for OUR King . The way Odin bended knee immediately. Tired of the mockery , THIS is deserving.
Ain't my king.
@@DarkAdonisVyersyour choice … you won’t enjoy the spoils 😉
@@DarkAdonisVyers "But as for these enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slaughter them before me.'"
Luke 19:27
So it shall be on the day of the Lord's visitation.
@@rookiecookie722 If anyone is wondering, this is referring to the parable of the ten minas, a parable Jesus is telling his disciples.
Yeshua is not your king. If He is, stop admiring other gods because He never did this. It is a transgression of the first commandment, admire other gods.
But you guys only say that follow Yeshua to appear spiritual to society, something He also said about the Pharisees.
A man who sacrificed all around him meeting the man who sacrificed everything for all around him
This made me cry. I'm reminded that this is how Jesus is to all of us. A loving, compassionate, and merciful God. Someone who always has His arms wide open to receive us when we come to Him. I always pray that everyone would come to know this loving God, who fills my life with so much love, hope, peace, and life. Jesus is knocking on your hearts, always ready to welcome you. We'll all meet Him if we would look past the pride that covers our eyes.
Are you somehow under the impression that everyone in the world is a Christian?
I genuinely loved this show. Animation is gorgeous
Wats the name of this show
@@tapiwamuchenje734 twilight of the gods. It’s on netflix. The animation can be a turn off for some people (myself included at first) but I strongly recommend it. Magic is animated beautifully
IMMEDIATELY I SAW THIS SCENE I SCREAMED !!!!!!!!!!! IN JOY!!!!
Me too!!!
Me three!!
Me four!😂 I was hoping Jesus would show up and smack Thor around
No, Odin/Wodan is the true GOD of Europeans not Jesus and Mohammed. Go back with that religions to the middle East where it belongs.
I would have cut a palm branch and vigorously waved it in front of the TV screen!
Odin meets the goat
The lamb*
The Lord Himself ✝️🙏
God Chosen One
He who died for our Sins.
@@sharayunanche Odin met and was defeated by the true All-Father.
I need to check this out cause these designs with this animation was incredibly Done!
rare to see someone im subscribed to in a comment section, and i agree 👍
Never thought I'd catch you here.
By all 3 versions of Odin's reactions that future vision was more than he can chew & excepted. Heck you can see how terrified he was.
Sigrid here is Sigrun the 9th Valkyrie Queen in God of war, she died and became a Valkyrie as you can see at the end of the season 1
“That If I met the idea of sacrifice in a Pagan story I didn’t mind it at all: again, that if I met the idea of a god sacrificing himself to himself I liked it very much and was mysteriously moved by it: again that the idea of the dying and reviving god similarly moved me provided I met it anywhere except the Gospels. The reason was that in Pagan stories I was prepared to feel the myth as profound and suggestive of meanings beyond my grasp even tho’ I could not say in cold prose ‘what it meant’. The story of Christ is simply a true myth. A myth working on us in the same way as the others, but with this tremendous difference that it really happened: and one must be content to accept it in the same way, remembering that it is God’s myth where the others are men’s myth: i.e., the pagan stories are God expressing himself through the minds of poets, using such images as He found there, while Christianity is God expressing himself through what we call ‘real things’”
- C.S. Lewis.
That was quite a moment between Tolkien and Lewis
In other words, God isn’t a myth. He’s real.
Theocracy is the worst of all governments. If we must have a tyrant, a robber baron is far better than an inquisitor. The baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity at some point be sated; and since he dimly knows he is doing wrong he may possibly repent. But the inquisitor who mistakes his own cruelty and lust of power and fear for the voice of Heaven will torment us infinitely because he torments us with the approval of his own conscience and his better impulses appear to him as temptations.
-C. S. Lewis.
God is a myth and he isn't real. He never was andnever will be. Religious whackjobs read mythology and pretend thesethings are real. @@DSkehan2004
@@DSkehan2004 He's more of a myth than the others. Like the other myths, his stories conjure fantastical stories of magic and power, but where the deities of polythieistic faiths are flawed individuals who do not possess all the powers to change reality. He does - he is said to be all-powerful, all-knowing, and loving, and yet terrible things continue to happen to people. The polytheistic faiths realized that you cannot reconcile such powers with the reality that we live in, but the Abrahamic faiths refuse to see that.
I need a Jesus vs Oden scene
*they actually make it right here*
Accurate. I was expecting more punching, but accurate.
Would be a horribly unfair fight. Lightning is nothing compared to the Savior being able to command all matter in existence with just his words alone.
@@Mannwhich It would be completely out of character, Jesus would never fight anyone, and He doesnt even need to
@@sultankebab1587 Right, he wouldn't need to. But the second time he comes, he's bringing a legion of angels with him to do battle at Megiddo.
@@Mannwhich well i mean you need to have an epic way to end the story
@@sultankebab1587 Haha, Exactly!
Jesus, is the one True God.
in a way minus the elder gods and great old ones.
Jesus is a pathetic myth, retold by liars
Wrong.
False. He was just a demigod.
Jesus was never god, Yahweh is god.
I understood its meaning: it is about Jesus being the only god remembered by everyone and about Odin and the Norse gods being forgotten by people when the Norse era and their reign ends since they are pagan gods and Jesus Christ is the only true and almighty god.
It's going to be the other way around at some point if current trends continue.
If it was just about that, then Odin wouldn't have knelt before the might of Jesus, he became weak and felt so small just at the sight of Jesus, which means He just saw the true God, his Creator and I'm sure that's what made him tremble in fear 🤌🏿
It's not even really about whether or not Jesus is "the one true God", it's more so about Odin realizing that he isn't as eternal as he thought. For a god that had ruled since the beginning of time, it would be horrifying to discover that humans would soon abandon Odin. Even worse, but that the new religion would even begin to be overshadowed by modernism (hence the towering skyscrapers over the church). He realized that all his power, all of his years, meant nothing because he wasn't truly eternal. Humans would outgrow the gods. It's one of the major themes of the show.
I mean, there's still the Hindu gods. Lot of people still worship them. Wouldn't really matter to Odin since it's not like he ever got a following in India, but Big J and Daddy Dearest is hardly the only god still worshiped in the modern age. And, to @V3ctor_Tude 's comment, he isn't on his knees because he's seeing a "true" god, but because he's seeing his own failure. He's seeing that he fails in a way greater than he ever could have imagined, not just dead but forgotten and replaced. Earlier Leif talks about how men may die but death in battle brings glory eternal, and Odin is seeing that the glory of his death will itself die swiftly. For a guy as storied and conniving as Odin, that's a real kick in the dick.
It's also a parallel between what Odin and the Norse mythos represent vs Christianity as a whole. Lots of themes here.
This scene... oh my god. Literally screamed "WHAT" when I saw Jesus.
Oh my “God” literally
Jesus: "you fell off lil bro"
Odin: wtf kid, you ripped me off
Fascinating concept! Odin, as a symbol of Norse mythology and its warrior ethos, represents the old world of gods shaped by power and fate. In contrast, Jesus introduces a radical new message of love, forgiveness, and grace that transcends the cycle of violence. The idea of these two figures meeting highlights a profound shift in worldview-from strength and sacrifice in battle to self-sacrifice for others. It’s a powerful reflection on the twilight of the old gods as a new light dawns through Christ.
This.
Jesus: EYE forgive you.
😂😂😂 Literal laugh out loud
I was hoping he would say "hey dude, what's up?"
Y allí empezó el samsara
That's dark but funny
God-tier comedy right here
This scene and the scenes about Loki and his children are my favorite parts of this whole show.
Unironically, Jesus is pointed to, as The Destroyer of gods.
Seeing as we believe Jesus IS THE Highest God, The Creator Incarnate, this....
actually seems well done.
The destroyer of fake gods mind you, super powered people who pose as gods. God is literally the one and only god.
@@Hero_Bryan False gods. Yes, I agree with ya!
Ngl I expected a nasty comment just like with most of these comment sections, but hey, here it is actually quite nice.
@@Hero_Bryan You're making a category error. there's many gods. but God in the christian context is the Absolute/the One, creator of all, which you can find examples of in people like Aristotle and Plato. gods like odin, thor, zeus, and so on are still created beings.
important to recognize this.
Well, that's BS
@@rolletroll2338
What specifically are you referring to as B.S. ? Got evidence of your claim rather than "nu uh"?
This scene obviously is meant to represent the christianization of scandinavia.
@@lsthero5863 but also how Jesus came to rid the world of false men pretending to be gods.
@@slappyjo1046Bro, in the animation Odin is a literal God. You don't need to be overly christian here
Yes bruh
@@slappyjo1046 They are really gods in this animation. And believe me, you Don’t want to start a theological debate with me
@@gannielukks1811 god yes. God not really, as clearly he is finite, and potentially mortal being. Not omnipotent, not omnipresent. Not God by capital G.
Jesus Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Every knee will bow and every tounge will confess that he is LORD.
I will never bend my knee, to no one.
@@Raubabbaupathetic
@@ronanchristiana.belleza9270 Sorry Republican Mindset. I have no King and will never accept one.
@@Raubabbau yep you are pathetic
@@Raubabbau ur 13 lil bro you will kneel
I can only imagine Jesus in a room full of other gods saying: "And I like bread." like that one Gravity Falls scene
I like how they linked this into reality and how the Nordic gods eventually fell out of favor.
and even, as a bonus, thats it was replaced by christianity (as viking culture started to die following its conversion to christianity)
I was surprised that Jesus wasnt mocked at this, i grow sicked of the media mocking Jesus very more often but not the other religion. Then i ask my self why?
Mockery is more than deserved
@@Valdemar135🤡
The real ragnarok
...is revelation
@@ElisioDolgan basically what hes saying -_-
At 1:48 “Every knee shall bow”
Accept for the roman and jews
Except Jews and muslims
@@tahamenji6837 nah.. EVERY knee shall bow😂💯
@@sarcomera nah… EVERY knee shall bow😂💯
@sarcomera go read a book muslims love and respect jesus and his is most respect it the muslims community we don't make statues of him naked and insulting him in front of a muslim would probably get u hurt and he will be always more close to us than u
And what's funny is that u Bragg about western power napoleon and ceasar but ended up worshiping a meddle Eastern man who had nothing to do with u looks like faith has sense of humour
This rings especially true with me, as after lapsing out of Christianity at a young age, I turned to the neo-pagan movement in my early teens, specifically the Norse branch.
Tell old me that Christ would replace Odin like in this short and he'd call you downright insane.
Christ is king.
Praise the Lord for you coming back to Christ! And also, I thought this was some animated RUclips video, not something on Netflix, so honestly, REALLY cool!
@@kingoffire105 I would bet it is cool, mythology is rather interesting.
Praise be the holy name of the King of Kings, Savior of Nations. Hallelujah.
@@preacherofmusic Hallelujah, praise be the King, who will reign forever and ever, amen.
@@kingoffire105 Amen. God bless you, brother/sister.
@@preacherofmusic Haha, I am a brother in Christ. And yes, thank you.
“Hay there mister frog… your not supposed to be here” deus vault intensifies
Seeing Jesus stepping down from the cross and looking down on a principality called Odin- the All-father and most powerful icon shown in cinemas is dope 🔥🔥
Odin was deeply terrified and believed he would be destroyed, however the real God (Jesus) who created Odin looks at Odin with pity and love
Bruh. No. Stop injecting your religious beliefs in a fictional show.
@@YouScareMe1 lol it's literally depicted in the scene.
@@johnskuse441 "the real God (Jesus) who created Odin looks at Odin with pity and love"
literally adding his own religious beliefs into the scene. The scene isn't even trying to state that Jesus is more powerful or that he's the one true God. That's just Christians forcing their view point down everything.
do you struggle to read or are you just slow?
@@YouScareMe1 It's literally depicted in the scene. That YOU can't see it when others can is a you problem.
@@johnskuse441 ok. how is it being depicted? you're literally so brainwashed that you're making stuff up. nowhere in the scene does it even suggest that Jesus is the one true God so exactly where are y'all getting that from?
i'm glad they didn't disrespect christians. 🙏
No, just pagans
@@clairestark9024 pagans can go to hell. Christ is King!
They disrespected the pagans. What was the need to do something like that?
@@mago2839it's fine. What's annoying is Christians acting like this is something religious or pro-Christ when it's just a thematic way of showing the Norse Gods and by extension Odin will be forgotten and not worshipped with the parallel of Christians destroying pagan worship sights.
@@YouScareMe1 Odin will not be forgotten, the Norse religion remains alive and is still being worshipped.
Funnily enough There COULD actually be a connection to Norse mythology and Christianity where after Ragnarok it’s said that there would be 2 mortal beings left, Lif and Lifthransir which could be the Norse names of Adam and Eve in this universe
I could be wrong though
Remember most of the information we have on Norse mythos comes post-Christinization where historians often rewrote the stories to fit in with Christianity. Generally if something fits too well that means it's a fake.
There is a connection
. . .
Beings good and bad
The beginning and end.
The two last witnesses on earth personify the beginning and end.
@@jasonsmith6219 I'd argue they underwent a more, shall we see, influence then outright rewrite.
@@SpiderkillersInc We can't say for certain. Other pagan myths, namely Celtic ones, underwent an entire rewrite where it's now unclear what was "original" and what was "new". Given that information, I'd assume that it leans a bit closer to "rewrite" than slightly influenced.
And one god, the resurrected Baldur. There are some uncanny parallels, eh?
I was floored when I saw this scene. Zac Snyder is always known for placing Christian imagery in his films but never this blatant. Loved it.
1:19 i can't get rid of him in my head
When you forgot to study for finals
1:53 "Every knee will bend"
At 1:22 to 1:24, you can see odins look
Real
Amen 🙌🏻
Ave Christus Rex, in the end we win🙏🏾
Every Tongue will confess.
Philippians Chapter 2: 10 - 11
0:52 When jormungandr (idk if thats spelled correctly) came up my first thought was the auroboris from ninjago lol
Every knee will bend to the one on the Most High.
For God is Love, and his Son has done the impossible.
Fun Fact; It not the Cross that killed him, its the Broken Heart he got when The Son took The Sins.
Not mine. If I fall, it'll be on my ass.
@@DarkAdonisVyers Knees, ass, back. You are before God all the same.
@@forresthunt9573 So... Not every knee?
@@DarkAdonisVyers Are your knees disconnected from the rest of your body? Are you a bionicle? A Mr. Potatohead?
@@forresthunt9573 If I fall on my ass, then I'm not on my knees. If you say that I _must_ kneel, then you are revealing the lie of Yahweh's "gift" of "free will".
Remember God said,
‘I am the First and I am the Last;
Besides Me there is no God.'
He is the only God.
The fear he saw, seeing all powerful but merciful God. He thought he was at the top, but there was another.
bs
Pretty awesome moment in the show. I'm definitely surprised to see this in any show in today's time.
Now *this* is a good and proper Jesus shoutout from Snyder, unlike with his lackluster/mid Superman.
You were doing so well until after the comma. 😂
@@Hard_Boiled_Entertainment Just like spitting quick lil stings with such facts/roasts lol. XP
@@jennyfeare1702 Sure Jan. ✌️😜
@@Hard_Boiled_Entertainment It literally is, tho, Superman is no Jesus analog and to make him one is cringe, and him murdering Zod was piss-poorly done and out of character, same with how Batman was "handled", the grimm and gritty vibe he was aiming for was mid. But sure whatever ya say, bozo 🤡👍
Loser
I'm not a Christian but this scene is one of the best in the series.
Would you like to be? If it were true?
Jesus easily claps the whole Verse. Odin hasn't squared up againts a God like our boy Big J.
@@na-Baron Big J also wields a hammer, like Thor, but his can create AND destroy.
How does a normal human clap a whole fictional verse?
@@stewystewymc3929
Same way He did in real life. Reveal himself to be the Son of God, die, ressurect, leave, indirectly lead a worldwide sweep againts pagan religions through his apostles, and then through his apostle's disciples and their disciples' disciples and so forth.
@@na-Baron Christianity did not defeat Asian religions. Shinto, Taoism, Hindu and Buddhism are still the minority religions in their territories.
The replacement of paganism with Christianity and the failure of Christians to expand into Asia was due to politics. Jesus did not make any revolt, it was the Roman politics of that period that chose Christianity for its own purposes.
Jesus was not the son of God, because god isn't real. @@na-Baron
In modern day Nordic countries, that Church would have probably been converted to a nightclub or a mosque, depending on who bought it.
The shock on Seid-kona’s face before she falls down. She has realized some way that her too will go in the void as Jesus arrives.
i love the thematic element of odin basically seeing that he will be doomed to irrelevance and whatever, but when i tell you that i burst out laughing when is watched this scene that is an understatement, it caught me so off guard
Reading mythology it always baffled me how selfish Odin always was. He never really cared about his own believers.
Christ to Odin: "Nah, I'd win."
Based
Bird didn't deserve that rip
I had chills down my arms in this scene. What a stunning moment.
Odin sees Jesus: "So you're telling me you sacrificed yourself... to yourself? You hack!"
He sacrificed himself for us.
@@HBAnimation923 It was still perceived as an aspect of El sacrificed to El.
@@SwordTune Who’s El?
Nvm it’s dat freaky statue thing
@@HBAnimation923
The Cartel boss
In the end, it wasn't a serpent that ended that Norse Gods... But without much sword and strife, they we're conquered by peace!
I want Zeus to see this just the look on his face 😂
Zeus in ryordanverse
@@altairgames7569 🙌
😂😂 exactly
yes.
@@wolfsbanealphas617 YHWH Better All Sky daddies and Sky Mommies 🗿💯
We need a edit of this scene playing "Sonne"
Season 2 needs to come like yesterday. This series is way too good.
I wonder how neil Gaiman would feel about this series because this has a hint of American Gods but on cocaine.
Odin meet *true god*
Wait a couple centuries and we will have a series with Jesus agonizing at being replaced by the next best thing just the same
Lord Jesus Christ,
the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages.
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father;
through him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary,
and became man.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate,
he suffered death and was buried,
and rose again on the third day
in accordance with the Scriptures.
He ascended into heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory
to judge the living and the dead
and his kingdom will have no end.
@@danielnemesio3388tendria que haber otro dios para eso y no lo hay
Every religion think their gods are the real ones.They're all wrong, there's no god out there.
@@danielnemesio3388 fortunately jesus is the final boss
Fact: Odin was just a man originating from the eastern steppe region, he led a portion of turks and scythian tribes to anatolia and then he settled his personal tribes among germania and gaul who became the Alans. The Alans joined with the gauls to form the huns and the franks under charlemagne. Atilla was most likely one of a number of descendants to Odin. Atilla's origin and story also parallels Charlemagne. The sword of Mars which Atilla wields looks just like the legendary Joyeuse wielded by Charlemagne.
Hope lives still, for in his last breath he pleaded and gave it to us.
I really like this because it shows the true death of a god. Not by battle or by destruction, but the world simply abandoning them and moving on. Being killed is one thing, but being forgotten is a worse fate for such a being.
Only because the Christian Church scared the world into worshipping their god.
@@DarkAdonisVyersisn't that all beliefs? In a way, they all spread by force or persuasion.
@@DarkAdonisVyers I don’t think the schematics matter for the purposes of the Aesir. The point is they are forgotten and unworshipped, and like the Vanir will slowly rot away, Ragnarok or not.
@@Lovesomebotes In theory, yes. In practice, no. For example, the Manchurians allowed the conquered Han Chinese to keep their own local folk religions, so long as they bowed to the new Empire. That's why when the Taiping Rebellion occurred. Many of the Han Chinese fought _for_ the Manchurian Qing Empire because they knew that the Taiping Christians would purge the local religions should they take power.
@@dionemoolman Yes, it does. Christianity didn't rise to power because Jesus was meek and mild and allegedly came back to life. It wrote to power because the Church murdered or otherwise penalized those who didn't convert. Yahweh's lapdogs are pieces of shit.
Philippians 2:10-11
"so that at the name of Jesus
every knee should bend,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father."
This was beautiful and epic. Even other gods must acknowledge Christ's true divinity. God bless y'all.
not a christ, just a weak myth
Yeah. Jesus is Lord. And no one gets to the father before him.
Get used to it Oden
What do you have against a Japanese dish bro 😂😂
JESUS IS NOT LORD - and also not the son
It's Odin and christianity brought so much suffering to mankind, how can people be this narrow-minded? So many christians in history didn't even follow what Jesus tried to teach, they were greedy control freaks, not better than the vikings...
@@alejandroangel5908he is.
@@fireblizard8366 no hes not - he was human and died
Snyder be like: tell me ur Christian without telling ur Christian
Is he really, he spouts some Ayn Rand bs sometimes
@@Hello-bi1pm No he doesn't, he literally never has. The nonsensical accusation that "Zack Snyder is a Randian" simply comes from the fact that he once expressed interest in making a film adaptation of The Fountainhead, but he indefinitely shelved the idea in 2016 because of the heated political discourse at the time, which still goes on just as fervently today.
Finally, a Zack Snyder Jesus cameo that actually makes sense.
What context am I missing here?
@@thelordofthelostbraincells Well, as you may or may not know, Zack Snyder has a tendency towards adding a bit of religious imagery into a lot of his films, typically by portraying at least one character in a messianic light(Man of Steel for example), weather it fits/makes sense or not. Here it actually really does fit, with this whole vision being essentially a highlight reel of the fall of the viking civilization and the Norse pantheon as a whole, being superseded by Christianity in the region. At least, that's what I think.
Between this and Vinland Saga christianity seems so freaking metal.
This is unexpectable 😶😶😶