Russia’s perpetual culture of death
Tragically, the Russian people remain mired in a perpetual culture of death. Mad Dog Putin is merely making things worse. Few people have suffered so much.
Tragically, the Russian people remain mired in a perpetual culture of death. Mad Dog Putin is merely making things worse. Few people have suffered so much.
There is plainly no comparison between the first-century apostles or Saint Francis and his followers to Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks. If you think the teachings of Karl Marx are analogous to the teachings of Jesus Christ then, well, I’m frankly speechless.
The Russians always get their tails kicked on the battlefield. This is no surprise. The concern is always just how brutal their despots are willing to behave in response. With Putin, we shall see.
This should be a matter of not only religion but conscience. It’s incumbent upon critics and HR departments and governments to realize and honor this. In this nation, your conscience must remain sacred.
Karl Marx saw people not as individuals made in the imago Dei — the Judeo-Christian conception of human beings made in the image of God — but as groups to be shoved into opposing categories pitted against one another as foes.
“The early church was a socialist church.” So said the Rev. Raphael Warnock in 2016, four years before the citizens of Georgia elected him as a U.S. senator.
Behold, rat-human skin hybrids funded by the NIH and your tax dollars. Does anyone care about ethics anymore?
There are flatly too many people right now praising to or sympathetic to socialism and/or Marxism. Some attempt to make an explicitly Christian case for communism.
This is why religious people generally have historically understood communism and socialism to be antithetical to religion: the communists and socialists told us they were.
How can people who preach diversity be so blatantly intolerant of the beliefs of others?