You are viewing a single comment's thread. View all
0
Breadpilled on scored.co
11 days ago0 points(+0/-0)1 child
He's right. This is one of the most salient criticisms of Christianity as it relates to our problem.
You have a god who said "Do not resist an evil person," allowed himself to be murdered by jews, and harshly rebuked the disciple who tried to defend him from this fate by using violent force. There isn't a single warrior or fighter anywhere in the entire early Christian witness; only martyrs. Many if not all of them were literal pacifists. Longstanding strains of pacifist Christianity still exist today, keeping in line with the reading of Christ's teachings at face value (Amish, Mennonites, anyone Anabaptist.)
You're wasting your breath trying to convince anyone that "love your enemies" actually means kill them. You're talking to an audience that is either never going to agree with you to begin with, or doesn't give a shit. In my lived experience, White people are becoming increasingly receptive to exclusively racial rhetoric when turning them against kikes. Conversely, approaching it from the religious angle turns them away.
But Christians don't want to hear that, because it forces them to recognize that a majority brown universalist religion isn't actually the most important aspect to ensuring the survival of the White collective. If they can't be main characters in some grand divine narrative where all of this is secretly a spiritual battle, then it's not worth it to them.
It doesn't matter. All that matters is that I try to do whatever I can with whatever blessings God gave me, and let Him do the rest. When He judges me, I want to makes sure I did all I could, whether it was a losing battle or not.
You have a god who said "Do not resist an evil person," allowed himself to be murdered by jews, and harshly rebuked the disciple who tried to defend him from this fate by using violent force. There isn't a single warrior or fighter anywhere in the entire early Christian witness; only martyrs. Many if not all of them were literal pacifists. Longstanding strains of pacifist Christianity still exist today, keeping in line with the reading of Christ's teachings at face value (Amish, Mennonites, anyone Anabaptist.)
You're wasting your breath trying to convince anyone that "love your enemies" actually means kill them. You're talking to an audience that is either never going to agree with you to begin with, or doesn't give a shit. In my lived experience, White people are becoming increasingly receptive to exclusively racial rhetoric when turning them against kikes. Conversely, approaching it from the religious angle turns them away.
But Christians don't want to hear that, because it forces them to recognize that a majority brown universalist religion isn't actually the most important aspect to ensuring the survival of the White collective. If they can't be main characters in some grand divine narrative where all of this is secretly a spiritual battle, then it's not worth it to them.