Sunday, December 3, 2006

How sad

In behaviour classic of Jason and his ilk, he refuses to acknowledge the proof presented here that he is part of a death cult.

Jason is one of the worst types of christian; in the face of all evidence to the contrary they insist upon spreading the lie that their god is a loving being who brings life, when it obviously happens in spite of him. Jason would much rather believe that his god is kind, gentle and benevolent and that all christians are good people, even when faced with the truth of the horrible atrocities they've committed to 'glorify their god'.

The list I provided of the scriptures in which god either ordered the murders of thousands of people or promised his followers rewards for doing it themselves was just a small sampling of the passages in the bible that glorify murder, yet Jason would rather pretend this doesn't exist.

The list of horrors committed by christians in god's name is equally long, and again what was posted here was but a small sample, and again we see Jason pretending like none of it ever happened in order to protect his belief in the fictional all-loving god.

Flat refusal to accept the truth makes Jason a weak christian, the kind who likes to spout off sanctimoniously about what good people christians are (in a comparison to everyonbe else the christian always ends up being a better person, of course), and how loving their god is, but when it comes time to put that faith to the test (or actually learn something other than what he's picked up at church), he runs away screaming in terror. He masks that terror with arrogance by pretending that the question isn't worth answering, the subject not worth learning about, or the person not worth speaking to (and one wonders what his pastor would think about Jason refusing to spread the message because he felt that the person to whom he is speaking is beneath him?), but it's obvious what the real motivation is.

He is, quite simply, afraid to examine his beliefs too closely. The thought of introspection bothers him quite a bit, judging by all of the questions he leaves unanswered and points he refuses to expand upon.

Jason, to quote Jack Nicholson, 'can't handle the truth'.

Because if he has to accept one truth about his religion he has previously refused to accept, then he'll have to re-examine the whole thing and the last thing christians like him want is to have to do that. Intellectually, logically and honestly they'll have to admit that things are not as they would like to believe. It means they realize that the christianity they've been aligning themselves with is a pretty lie created many centuries ago to make the combined package look more palatable to outsiders, and more acceptable to those within the cult who wish to maintain the fantasy of a loving christian god.

So basically, Jason, you can take your arrogant, holier-than-thou-better-than-you attitude and stick it forcibly sideways and sans lube up your pompous, frightened ass.

If there's still some space left that isn't occupied by your head, that is.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I remember, as a fundie, what a terrible shock it was to me when I realized that much of the early Old Testament was simply genocide. Pure and simple.

If any nation went around claiming, today, that God told them to wipe out every man, woman, child, and animal in some land they wanted to invade, we'd have a world war. Hey -- in fact, we did that, didn't we??

But I was able to put up an impenetrable wall between something like that, and what I would read in the Old Testament.

There's a staggering dissonance inside the minds of fundies.

Conservative Follies said...

'Hey -- in fact, we did that, didn't we??'

Indeed.

And not only did we do it, the Muslims are actively enforcing their form of religious genocide.

Makes sense, consideringthat christianity and islam are basically the same religion. Different holidays, different prophets, same beliefs.