Anonymous 01/24/2020 (Fri) 13:37:08 Id: 1523b9 No.78422 del
(114.67 KB 759x600 the fruit withers.jpg)
There is one further charge I would lay at the feet of modern Christianity that is directly connected to it's need to subvert. That of the destruction of the original European mythos. Yes, under the guise of Christianity great monuments have been erected within Europa, incredible edifices worthy of the people who created them. But these edifices, these achievements all came at great cost to ourselves in the grand history of our people. It is often glossed over how many Europeans who resisted this Abrahamic religion were put to the sword, how many towns were engulfed in the "cleansing" Christian flames, how many were slaughtered to make the European continent submit to it's teachings. Of course we all recognise the truth of "might makes right" but that does not absolve Christianity and it's claim of being "European" of it's actions, if anything it makes one question them further. If the Christian faith is so pious, if it's ideals so noble then why did it insist on destroying and subverting so much of our peoples heritage. Why did it have to whore itself by pretending Woden was an analogue for Christ, something recorded within multiple works, why did it have to hide among European traditions and holidays in order to "fit" in. It's actions do not fit some "noble" religion preaching "salvation", it fits with semetic concepts of subversion and blood. It stole a great deal from us and offered little beyond a mask upon which was placed over European advancement and ideals. It is not Christianity that makes the European soul, it is Christianity that has tried to influence it into what we are today. Weakened. Vulnerable. No doubt some would reply with the analogy of "well its kinda European, getting rid of it is like throwing the baby out with the bath water" to which my response is if the baby in question is slowly killing you I do not care if the bath water goes with it or not. There is a more truer analogy than that for the situation we face today however.

Imagine an apple tree if you will, it's fruits most delicious and glistening, an apple tree you helped grow and nurture from sapling to today. One day as you lay your eyes upon the branches once more you see the fruit that has nourished you for so long appears less vibrant, has less luster. You return day after day and watch as most of it's crop whither and the bark slowly darkens, still caring for it none the less. Then one day when you return to the tree you find most of the fruit has rotted, only a handful of still ripe pieces dot it's branches. The sun is still shining but the soil in which the tree grows is poisoned, the fresh water you provided has done little to slow the rot. All your ministrations to preserve it and restore it failed. You can stay with the tree, try to keep it alive despite the corruption seeping through it as parts of it bark slough off and bloated insects make their homes within it's dead branches, it's demise clear for all to see other than the most blinded. Or you can pick the remaining ripe fruits, their skin still glistening and the meat of the fruit still pure and unmolested, savouring the taste of it and planting the seeds from it upon new, fertile soil. Modern Christianity seeks to bring this tree back to life never understanding the soil it grew in was risky from the start. We must be the ones to ensure it's seeds do not go to waste and grant new life as the old tree withers. Something new must be born from it's seeds, a better soil must be chosen.