Cobol
Code Jockey
From my perspective, Christianity is nothing more than a fatalistic Death Cult that has predicted the mass liquidation of all earthly species in 365 CE. Produced a continuous supply of luminaries who’ve longed for nothing short of the total and complete annihilation of our home world.
Christianity (like Judaism and Islam) is an anticipatory religion; a sect almost wholly fixated on the expectations (and apprehension) of a single and supposedly inescapable future event: the apocalypse detailed in John’s Revelation where all but “saved” Christians will be butchered by the Middle Eastern Christian god.
In the last 1,700 years there have been more than three-hundred prominent captains of Christianity who have announced with anticipation that their god was about to lay waste to all life on earth. In this generation alone there have been over forty major public incidents where Christian leaders have proclaimed that their god was here and it was time to die.
Nearly half of Christians believe that their Middle Eastern god will commence its mass extinction of all creatures in their lifetime. Christianity is the longest-lasting death cult in the history of humanity. Christians should probably read their bibles a little more carefully, because if they did they’d see that the very first Christian Doomsdayer, Jesus Christ himself, got his own prediction of the end of the world stupendously wrong when he boldly announced: “I TELL YOU THE TRUTH, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.” (Matthew 16:28, Luke 9:27, Mark 9:1). Evidently, the character Jesus wasn’t exactly telling the truth. All those standing there in the story went on to die perfectly normal, entirely non-supernatural deaths, and that leaves the 21st Century Christian in quite a credibility muddle.
These earth-wrecking firestorms are little more than the ramblings of frenzied minds. We can all hope that these apocalyptic death anxious notables might one day direct their efforts to improving life on this planet.
Christianity (like Judaism and Islam) is an anticipatory religion; a sect almost wholly fixated on the expectations (and apprehension) of a single and supposedly inescapable future event: the apocalypse detailed in John’s Revelation where all but “saved” Christians will be butchered by the Middle Eastern Christian god.
In the last 1,700 years there have been more than three-hundred prominent captains of Christianity who have announced with anticipation that their god was about to lay waste to all life on earth. In this generation alone there have been over forty major public incidents where Christian leaders have proclaimed that their god was here and it was time to die.
Nearly half of Christians believe that their Middle Eastern god will commence its mass extinction of all creatures in their lifetime. Christianity is the longest-lasting death cult in the history of humanity. Christians should probably read their bibles a little more carefully, because if they did they’d see that the very first Christian Doomsdayer, Jesus Christ himself, got his own prediction of the end of the world stupendously wrong when he boldly announced: “I TELL YOU THE TRUTH, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.” (Matthew 16:28, Luke 9:27, Mark 9:1). Evidently, the character Jesus wasn’t exactly telling the truth. All those standing there in the story went on to die perfectly normal, entirely non-supernatural deaths, and that leaves the 21st Century Christian in quite a credibility muddle.
These earth-wrecking firestorms are little more than the ramblings of frenzied minds. We can all hope that these apocalyptic death anxious notables might one day direct their efforts to improving life on this planet.