A European prophet does not make sense (in the context of ancient religion). This does not mean that prophecy is not relevant to Europeans. It is.
I have no idea what you're talking about in the middle section. Concrete and computers before Christianity? Are you being funny?
I don't accept subversion, except as a reality. Evil is just a reality. If you cannot resist it, then you are weak. Some volkish occult religion is not going to make whites strong against the Jews.
I think one thing that we have to stop doing is identifying as the equivalent of some past peoples. We are white, yes. But what does this mean today? We aren't the anglo-saxons. We aren't the vikings. We aren't the Europeans of the 13th century.
We are who we are today. We are something different. We need to stop seeking refuge in the past, to stop trying to be some golden age version of ourselves. This precise moment we find ourselves in has never existed before now. I say Christ appeals to something universal and timeless, something eternally present in all moments, and in the hearts of the just and blessed, so certainly among us*.
CHIRO 0 points 3 years ago
A European prophet does not make sense (in the context of ancient religion). This does not mean that prophecy is not relevant to Europeans. It is.
I have no idea what you're talking about in the middle section. Concrete and computers before Christianity? Are you being funny?
I don't accept subversion, except as a reality. Evil is just a reality. If you cannot resist it, then you are weak. Some volkish occult religion is not going to make whites strong against the Jews.
I think one thing that we have to stop doing is identifying as the equivalent of some past peoples. We are white, yes. But what does this mean today? We aren't the anglo-saxons. We aren't the vikings. We aren't the Europeans of the 13th century.
We are who we are today. We are something different. We need to stop seeking refuge in the past, to stop trying to be some golden age version of ourselves. This precise moment we find ourselves in has never existed before now. I say Christ appeals to something universal and timeless, something eternally present in all moments, and in the hearts of the just and blessed, so certainly among us*.