Not necessarily. Look a several Christians denominations, these disagree with the part of obeying the Law of God. Then, even Christian religious people can be dead wrong when participating in an event that revives an ancient pagan worship.I did ask if people had comments on any angle of this
But some responses make more sense than others
You may think you're being clear, but I'm not really sure what you mean by "disagree with"
Are you trying to make the case that they shouldn't exist? And is it meant to be a theological case?
I think there's a lot people DO disagree with - the use of land and money, the corruption and the politicking, entire communities displaced to build Olympic parks, environmental issues, etc.
I think lots has been written and said about how people putting their Olympic dream first in their lives - and the money and time dedicated to that - has put the Olympic lifestyle at the level of or above religious practice for some people.
But the religious people who are also Olympians would disagree
I believe the use of resources - money, land, and time - blood sweat and tears - are stronger candidates for having a problem with the Olympics than the torch - and the possible environmental objections to the torch are far more concerning than the ritual aspect of it - the ritual which is arguably theologically empty. I don't know if any modern Pagans may reasonably object that their sacred ritual is being disrespected by being used by non-believers in a non-sacred way or something? Though modern Pagans and the Olympians are both only reconstructing something from the past, not exercising a living tradition as such. Would that matter? Food for thought.
As much as I appreciate viewing the Olympics, I think the lives and resources spent on them can give us pause, far more so than a nonbelieving / no-longer-theological ritual.
Easter with or without rabbits and eggs is pagan 100% and many Christian churches celebrate it.
In the 50s. the first Messianic assembles were against Sunday worship, disregarding the Law of God, celebrating pagan feasts, an more. There some of these assemblies around, not with multitudes of followers. I don't know if the have changed throughout the years, but these were religious people who didn't play for both sides, or they were with their God or against their God. No middles.
Do you know what? After studying their intention and approaches I agree with those dudes.
About people who are not religious, who cares?
But, if a person is a religious dude and says that he loves, obeys and follows his god, then he just can't be playing and let pagan customs and rituals entering in his life. If he does so, he is just lying to himself about having the opportunity of a reward after death.
Did you read about that guy Jesus? He is the door. He obeyed his father regardless of what. Surely he didn't even run the 100 meters in the Olympiads, and I tell you, he surely could have been the winner every 4 years for several seasons. But look at this, even when he had the opportunity to do so, he didn't even try to show his karate skills when he was apprehended by the roman soldiers. But surely he said that he didn't come to change anything from the Law of his father.
Then, if he is the door, the ones who want to pass thru must reject all kind of paganism.
So your point saying that many religious people don't see wrong with the Olympiads, this doesn't mean that it's OK to think that way, because it is ignorance.
And you know that ignorance is not an excuse. Even the the Law of the Israelite god existed a sacrifice because sin caused by ignorance. There you go. So many religious people committing sin because ignorance.
But, if by chance, there is a religious dude reading this thread and he finds out that he was disobeying the Law of the biblical god when participating in pagan rituals, and recognizes he was sinning, he can check in the scriptures what he can do to fix it. As long as he is alive, he has chances to fix it.
Of course you argue against what I am writing here, sure you can do. However, the Law of the scriptural god is clear, this god made his point and that's it.
One more thing. In the scriptures there are verses referring "salvation" as a racing tournament. Some people interpret these verses as to be in accord with the Olympiads. In no place the good book says so. It only makes an analogy, not so a doctrine. And yes, racing, boxing, swimming tournaments are allowed for religious people as long as these are not dedicated or guided to or from pagan rituals.