>>21349467>early chritians women, poor people, slaves and idiots?They still are. Christianity from its very inception was the religion of decadence, a refuge for those who lacked strength, vitality, and a sense of life’s grandeur. It appealed to the weak, to those crushed under the weight of existence, to the lowest orders of society, because it offered them a perverse comfort. It told them: Blessed are the meek, the downtrodden, the powerless. And these “blessings” are precisely what gave them the courage to declare their pitiful condition as some twisted form of virtue.
The poor, the slaves, the women—these were people who desired escape from the harsh realities of their impotence, their inability to rise above life’s burdens. Christianity spoke to their weakness, it glorified their suffering as something noble. It turned their mediocrity into something divine.
Why did they flock to it? Because it allowed them to seek vengeance against the noble, the powerful, the healthy. It inverted every natural value. Where once strength and beauty were to be revered, Christianity told them that their misery was better, purer. It was a religion of resentment—against life, against power, against the very will to rise higher.
These early Christians were idiots not because they lacked intelligence, but because they willed themselves into a life-denying faith. They found in it an ideology that allowed them to feel morally superior without doing anything to better themselves. Christianity's success lies precisely in how it poisoned these weak souls, and in how it continues to celebrate their pitiful virtues as the highest ideals.