How To Put An Awake Person Off Christianity (Part One)
If ever you’ve taken Ecstasy you’ll probably be familiar with that maddening scenario in which all your friends have started coming up on their pills but yours doesn’t seem to be working.
“You’re gonna be fine. These pills are great,” says one friend, trying to focus on you with pupils now the size of saucers.
“Seriously, don’t worry. You’ll be up in a moment. Just give it time…” says another, stroking your arm, then forgetting to stroke your arm as another massive rush comes on.
Your friends all look at you with love. You shoot them back a look which they are too monged to recognise is the purest hate. They are having fun and you are not. Their pills are working and yours never will. It was just your rotten luck to have picked the one dodgy pill in the entire batch. You are cursed. You are alone. You are very, VERY bitter.
Nothing is going to shake your conviction that however good everyone else’s white pills might have been yours is definitely a dud.
Why am I telling you this story? Because it reminds me quite a lot of a phenomenon I encounter with depressing regularity on social media whenever the topic of Christianity comes up.
All too often a rift opens up in my mostly red-pilled audience between those who see Christianity as our only hope and salvation and between those who for various reasons see it as a distraction or a threat.
What invariably happens at this point is that the Christians start testifying to the non-Christians as to the wondrousness of their faith. “Just open your heart to Jesus and you too will see the truth!”, is the general tenor of their evangelical message. And every time they do so, I wince.
It’s not that I am doubting the sincerity of their beliefs nor the beneficence of their desire to save souls. Rather it’s that I know that their well-meant attestations will, more often than not, have the very opposite effect to the one intended. Far from winning over new converts it is a strategy almost guaranteed to harden the hearts of unbelievers and to entrench them in their resistance.
One reason for this is that the Awake - or red-pilled, call them what you will - are by nature sceptical of everything. And that definitely includes ‘organised religion.’ For them, Christianity - at least potentially - is yet another of those things we have taught (well, -ish) to believe as true, meaningful and real, but which turns out on closer examination to be yet another gigantic psyop. Maybe, even, the biggest psyop of them all.
If you’ve looked into 9/11 or the Kennedy assassination - or even more obscure areas like Paul Is Dead - why should the religion that has dominated Western thought and culture for over 2,000 years be off limits?
Well it shouldn’t ,obviously. Once you’ve understood that the world is ruled against the interests of the people by a Cabal of the rich, powerful and wicked, then clearly the next step is to ask who They are. And definitely on the list of suspects should be any institution such as the Vatican or the Church of England which has held such sway over both the spiritual and temporal realms for centuries.
When you go down this rabbit hole, you’ll find plenty of evidence to support this thesis, more often than not involving the (supposedly) Catholic Jesuits. You’ll also come across copious research claiming to debunk Christianity: scepticism as to the authenticity and credibility of the key scriptural texts; the theory that Christianity is, in fact, just a “Jewish plot”; claims that Christ never actually existed, or that he is merely an archetype derived from older religions, perhaps just a rebadged version of the Egyptian god Horus; the Old Testament God is actually Satan; and so on.
Then there are the appeals to liberty, rationality, modernity. Christianity is another cope designed by man to deal with his fear of death. Christianity is patriarchal, misogynistic, homophobic, controlling, hierarchical, and worryingly out of touch on the issue of animal rights. Christianity is a primitive superstition which places undue credence on the existence of a big ‘Sky Fairy.’ Christianity can’t be right because how can you reconcile its notion of a loving God - thanks, Stephen Fry! - with parasitical worms that eat the eyes of innocent children. Christianity - with its outrageous claim that ‘no one comes to the Father except through me’ - is discriminatory, elitist and cruelly indifferent to all those other, marvellous religions out there whose yogis and sufis and mystics seem so refreshingly chilled, wise and based.
Why it’s almost as if, of all the people in the world, the ones who ought to be most sceptical of Christianity are the Awake. Especially those among the Awake who have discovered the true nature of the world after meeting the little grey men on their DMT and Ayahuasca trips. Or the ones that have raised their consciousness through transcendental meditation. Or who have woken their inner snake via kundalini yoga. Or who were red-pilled in the first place by David Icke and have inferred that if he was so right about all the conspiracy stuff, he must be right about the spiritual stuff too.
I do hope that my ardent, evangelising Christian friends can now see the problem here. When you tell defiantly atheist - or at least non-Christian - Awake people that “Well, Christianity has been great for me!”, or - red rag to a bull this one - that you are going to pray for them, you are not doing your cause any favours. As far as your reluctant potential convert is concerned, you’re saying the equivalent of “Trust me, bro. The Twin Towers really were brought down by a man in a cave. I feel it in my bones and anyway, the 9/11 Commission says so!”
This is why, as I often say, the first job of any Christian in the face of non-believers should be “Don’t frighten the horses.” Coming on too strong to a non-Christian is like coming on too strong to someone you fancy: more often than not the effect is repellant.
Of course, I recognise that for some non-believers even the merest mention of Christianity qualifies as coming on too strong. For example, whenever I have one of my podcast chats with my brother Dick about our latest adventures in Christianity, there will always be the odd complaint in the Rumble comments about how booooring it is and why can’t we talk about something else?
My Christian answer to such people is: “**** you and the horse you rode in on.” Or, maybe, if I’m in more polite mode: “Why not go and listen to Triggernometry instead? I’m sure you’ll find it much more up your street.” This isn’t a religion thing nor is it - heaven forfend - an evangelising thing. Rather, it’s that the entire point of my podcast, as ought to be bleeding obvious by now, is authenticity. My house, my rules. If you don’t like me talking about Christianity or foxhunting or my memories of Oxford, or my interrupting the podcast to take a call from my daughter wanting more money or to let the cat through the window or to put the dog out, or hearing Dick talk about military re-enactment or World of Tanks, I’m not going to go: “Oh. That’s a good point you make there. From now on I’m going to talk about veganism, Tartaria, and the fact that we’re living in a simulation. Will that do you?”
No, the reason I do mention Christianity now and again is that I find the subject fascinating. Indeed, it may be the rabbit hole to end all rabbit holes. Certainly, it ought to be at least of passing interest to any vaguely curious person - of which all the Awake are, by definition - because it addresses, or claims to address, all the big questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? What happens afterwards?
Awake people who happen to be atheists may think that they have a right to duck out of that first question. But if they try it that would be a massive cop out because it would entail subscribing to one of the biggest psyops in history: Evolutionary Theory. If you don’t yet realise this then you clearly haven’t looked into it. Most of the usual suspects were involved in its genesis - Rothschilds, high-level freemasons, the Illuminati, the Jesuits [who gave us Big Bang theory] - and, the science, as so often with Establishment science, just doesn’t stack up. Basically, if still believe we got here by accident then you may as well hand back your Awake card now because your position is no better than that of the most deluded Normie.
I’m not saying ‘Evolutionary Theory is a busted flush therefore Genesis is correct.’ What I am saying is “Given that Evolutionary Theory is as credible as the Moon Landings, then you’re going to need a more plausible alternative.” It seems to me - correct me if I’m wrong - that whether you believe it all came about because of aliens, or cosmic rays, or whatever else, you’re still ultimately going to have to acknowledge that somewhere, somehow, the originator of all this stuff was some kind of Creator.
Once you’ve accepted, as logically you must, that the world and everything in it is some manner of supernatural creation then you can no longer opt out. You have to pick a side. For some, the decision may already have been made: if you were born, say, Muslim or Hindu you might well feel spiritually and culturally committed to the religion you’ve got. But my argument here isn’t addressed to the minority in such a category. Rather it’s addressed, well mainly, at that hefty contingent among the Awake who are either undecided about or actively hostile towards the notion that Christianity is the answer to our current predicament.
And the way I think we should approach it is quite different from the “Jesus saved me and He’ll save you too” one favoured by too many Christians. Rather the question that needs to be asked is: which, of all the religions out there, is most likely to piss off, thwart and confound the evil bastards currently running the world and hell bent on poisoning us, maiming us, torturing us, enslaving us and killing us?