11 months ago8 points(+0/-0/+8Score on mirror)1 child
Nope, in fact the early Christians literally endured torture in death because compromise with evil is evil itself. Modern "judeo-Christianity" is built on compromise with the enemies of Christ, which is why it is no true Christianity at all. Christians are called to love (IE will the Eternal Good) their enemies, but *never* to compromise or aid and abet them. One can love someone one is at war with if one keeps in mind the aim of the war is to prevent one's enemy from seeking his own evil.
11 months ago2 points(+0/-0/+2Score on mirror)2 children
It's important to note that when Jesus said "Love your enemies," He never meant that towards non-Whites, particularly jews. The context was for your fellow White man, just like the word "neighbors" was. As Psalm 97:10 states, you can't love God if you don't hate evil. Jesus Christ was killed for naming and hating the jew, and that is the cross we must carry to follow Him.
11 months ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)1 child
Nah, He meant to love even then, but as I said, "love" is not being friends with or being nice to someone, its willing their eternal good. Sometimes the Good for someone who has made themselves the enemy of God is death.
No, He absolutely did not mean to love satan and his fellow fallen angel demons. He said to judge righteous judgment in John 7:24, not to be deceived by appearances; just because a nigger or a jew try to act like a Christian doesn't mean they are. Also, Matthew 7:15-20 has Him explaining non-Whites are forever bad. God has already judged them forever, just as Jesus did when He said He only came for the White race in Matthew 15:24.
RE neighbors: When Jesus was asked "Who are our neighbors?" he gave the parable of the Good Samaritan. The Good Samaritan helped a thief who was betrayed by his buddies and left for dead. He paid for him to stay at an inn and bound up his wounds with expensive oil and wine.
Who was the neighbor in the story? It was the Good Samaritan. Not the innkeeper, not the jews, and not the thief.
11 months ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
The Samaritan was actually White, though. The only non-White neighbors Jesus ever had were jews that He called satan and canaanites that He called a dog and refused to save.
All of Christendom is based on Christ. If Christendom declines, it's because of inaction from you and me against the jews, namely because we disobeyed God by letting jews and non-Whites in. So what are we doing about it?
They wouldn't need to censor us so much if it wasn't working. The cycle of their next inevitable expulsion is coming as it always does, only this time we have the internet.
Who was the neighbor in the story? It was the Good Samaritan. Not the innkeeper, not the jews, and not the thief.