I'm seeing some posts here suggesting that the idea "Go to church; read the Bible and pray daily" is taking hold.
You might be wondering what the next steps are.
The answer is blindingly obvious. It's the church you are going to.
It's time for you to take it over.
If you belong to one of the many protestant or protestant-like churches, it's ridiculously easy to take it over. You show up. With your friends and neighbors. You get yourself on the board of governors or whatever. Then you kick the liberals and race traitors and anti-Christs out with prejudice.
Step 1 is you have to show up. Step 2 you get elected. Step 3 you take control.
Think of it this way. Church Corporation X owns property and they own the church building. The way Church Corporation X is setup is that the people who are elected to run the church get to decide how the assets are used and disposed of, and what rules are put in place, etc... So you get yourself on the board. You write the rules. You take control of the property.
Folks, it's drop-dead simple to understand. It really is that easy.
Some of you are wondering how you can possibly win against so many liberals. The answer is really, really easy: They win when you don't show up. You win when you do. Bring your friends and neighbors too. Tell them how the churches were taken over by Satan-worshiping faggots and cunts. Tell them that just like Jesus cast the money-changers out of the temples it's time to cast the jew-lovers out of the churches and take them back.
As a point of reference -- see if you can find someone who was a Ron Paul supporter back in 2008 and 2012. Go ask them what they did and how stuff went down. The Ron Paul supporters almost broke the Republican Party. Many of them are still in key positions throughout the states and counties. Many of Trump's people are Ron Paul people who figured out the game.
Once again, here is the game:
* Show up. Bring your friends.
* Get elected.
* Take control.
That's it.
Now, go and take back our churches.
For those of you who belong to a more hierarchical church, like the LDS or Catholics: The game is a little different, but it's really the same game. Show up, bring your friends, and you will eventually be put in charge of stuff.
It's literally free real estate!
Keep reading your Bible and praying. And keep showing up. If the church pisses you off, show up even more. And keep showing up and showing up until everyone knows who you are and you know everyone. And when it is time -- get elected.
I myself am non-religious, but a regular churchgoer under a religious pretense. I have been considering hopping onto their church government panel just to try and counter subvert them with based theology.
I'm just one man, but perhaps I shall...
In times past, such people would've gone to church for a variety of reasons. Among them were the benefits to your social standing and also because the church formed part of your power base. In other words, they were using the church as much as the church was using them. It was a quid-pro-quo.
Now, obviously hypocrisy is bad, bad stuff in Christianity, but what is hypocrisy? It is PRETENDING to be something you are not, or to believe something you do not. As such, there is literally no quarrel any Christian should have with someone who shows up to church but doesn't accept every little thing the church teaches.
That said, what you mean by "non-religious" is probably something that can be translated to: "I am a true follower of Christ (the God of Truth) and not a follower of the false christ many churches teach." If that is the case, and I encourage you to compare your philosophy with what Christ and his disciples actually taught as opposed to what people say he taught -- then you should be welcome in any church. You just have to stick to your guns and read the Bible for yourself, which is pretty much what every church claims they want their membership to do.
I think religion is inevitable. To seek God is to be human. Even the most subhuman of all races throughout time had some sort of religion, even if it was backwater demon worship.
Saying organized religion is evil to me is like saying, "government is evil." It's not. Inherently, it is something morally neutral (and necessary to have,) but it is functionally evil far more often than it is ever good on account of how human beings execute it.
> That said, what you mean by "non-religious" is probably something that can be translated to: "I am a true follower of Christ (the God of Truth) and not a follower of the false christ many churches teach." If that is the case, and I encourage you to compare your philosophy with what Christ and his disciples actually taught as opposed to what people say he taught -- then you should be welcome in any church. You just have to stick to your guns and read the Bible for yourself, which is pretty much what every church claims they want their membership to do.
This is always the prickly point. I am truly non-religious, but not atheistic. I consider myself simply a Theist. God exists, and has some level of active participation in our existence. Beyond that, it is impossible to know with any meaningful level of specificity what that means. Though, I would say indeed that my god's name is Truth.
I'm completely agnostic on whether or not Jesus Christ was a real historical figure, a wholesale mythological character, or some combination of the two, but I definitely don't agree with all his teachings. I agree when he leans into stoicism, detachment from the material, but I discard the suicidal empathy stuff as false (love your enemy, turn the other cheek... even The Good Samaritan is a dysfunctional teaching.)
And I don't believe I'm misinterpreting these teachings. I've read the entire New Testament through multiple times, almost certainly more than a large number of Christians. I do honestly believe the leftists/cuckservatives have a more honest reading of Christ's words without abstracting them over the right wingers in a significant number of instances.
But I attend Church under the pretense of being Christian so that I can expect meaningful reciprocity for my participation in their community (if they don't see you as "inside," then you are extremely limited in what you can do there or what you can get out of it.)