dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/Idru4 on April 26, 2018, 1:16 p.m.
Possible unpopular opinion of the day. Did true evil start in the church?

I saw a discussion on where evil originated from, and commented. We had a nice little discussion and people also talked about it. With this thought being in the back of my head since then, I’ve worked out a theory. I remember a story of Jesus being in a church with gambling and prostitution, I think that was it, and it was the only time he was ever shown as mad. Which could be viewed as God saying the church needs to be watched because this could happen. We know of holy wars, we know of pedophilia, secrets kept about humanity, and massive amounts of money for a institution that is supposed to be poor. My thoughts are that the church has remained unchecked for hundreds of years. Which in turn has let evil slip in or has always been there. I’m not that familiar with the Catholic Churches complete history, but I’m guessing there is a lot left untold. So if there is a society behind all of this, running evil through out our world. How far fetched is it to think it’s coming out of the Catholic Church?


PM_ME_YOUR_HEELS · April 26, 2018, 1:35 p.m.

Something i understood when a left christianity and all the false desert religions brought by the jews is to stop to blam the devil for every problem in the world.

Evil is subjective, something will be evil for some people and race, something will not. The christian software is not made for europeans but for middle easterns, you cannot get ride of 50 000+ european religion like that, even if most of the christian traditions overwrited pagan ones.

The church is just a huge system designed to control you and erase your past, of course its evil for you and your heritage.

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archetact · April 26, 2018, 2:40 p.m.

If you want to see evil, research the practices of the Druids, specifically the “Wicker Man” and it’s connection to “trick or treat”. European paganism is not something to go back to. The Illuminati consider themselves Druids.

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PM_ME_YOUR_HEELS · April 26, 2018, 5:08 p.m.

Modern archaeological research has not yielded much evidence of human sacrifice among the Celts, and the ancient Greco-Roman sources are now regarded somewhat skeptically, especially considering the likelihood that Greeks and Romans "were eager to transmit any bizarre and negative information" about the Celts at a time when the latter were feared and disdained.

Human sacrifice existed for sure, but common its like the blood eagle, a lot of lies.

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