• Mossy Feathers (They/Them)@pawb.social
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    2 months ago

    Nonetheless, Bishop Robert Barron, of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester, in Minnesota, asked his 280,000 X followers: “Would they ever have dreamed of mocking in this gross, public way, a scene from the quran?” He responded that “we all know the answer.”

    French freedom of expression has not been aimed solely at one religion, however. In 2015, gunmen killed 12 people to avenge controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in an attack on the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo. The publication even republished the controversial caricatures five years later to mark the start of the attackers’ trial.

    I’m amazed these fucks have supposedly forgotten about Je Suis Charlie. People make fun of Islam all the time. People make fun of Buddhists, Hindus, Wiccans/pagans (holy shit people make fun of Wiccans LOL), native American/Australian aboriginal religions, atheism, agnosticism, scientology, Mormonism, and yes, Christianity. Get over it. I know how much you like to pretend to be the victim. It’s been the hot church topic since I was last inside a church 10~15yrs ago.

    “We’re being so oppressed.”

    “Many countries ban being Christian, we’re the worst-treated religion in the world.”

    “They’re getting rid of Christmas.”

    "Unlike other religions, Christianity doesn’t have a country; that makes us a stateless religion and oppressed."1

    "Everyone hates us 'cause they wanna be us."2

    “Gays are okay3 but only so long as they don’t get marr-OMG THE GAYS ARE GETTING MARRIED, NOT MY PURE, TOTALLY CHRISTIAN-EXCLUSIVE RITUAL ABOUT DECLARING COMMITMENT TO YOUR PARTNER.”

    Oh boo-hoo, you’re just not used to being treated the same as everyone else. Grow up. The pastors at the church I went to as a kid would have probably enjoyed it or at the very least, had no strong opinions. They also didn’t care much about your sexuality or gender; they were just concerned about giving you the tools you needed to “pursue a successful relationship with god.” It didn’t matter if God accepted you or not, that was between you and God; as far as they were concerned, it wasn’t their place to judge. They actually wanted to do good, and their skin was thick enough that they didn’t get offended when someone joked about Christianity. Then you came along.

    You, on the other hand. Slimy, cowardly and completely lacking in moral fiber. You’re weak. You can’t stand the idea of someone else enjoying things that you don’t. You can’t imagine a world where men can be feminine and women can be masculine. You can’t wrap your mind around the idea that men can love men, and women can love women. You collapse and cry the moment anyone sneezes in your general direction because you’ve isolated yourself in a Christian echo chamber, and now your brain is so holey you lack the mental strength to interact with anyone outside of your circle.

    You claim that god gives you strength in the form of the sword of the spirit and biblical shield. You claim that he protects you and guides you. Yet, your god just sits and watches. Are you sure he’s your god, and that he’s on your side? If so, why doesn’t he stop the gays, the trans, the feeemoids, and other “”“DEIs”“”? Are you sure he’s on your side? The fact that the LGBT community keeps on trucking despite your best attempts makes it seem like the opposite.

    Weaklings. Your pathetic squirming disgusts me.


    1 Yes, they really said that. I shit you not, they’d swing between “American is a Christian nation, founded to be a beacon and safe harbor to Christians everywhere” and “Christianity is a stateless religion.”

    2 Yes, that was a real thing my youth pastors liked to repeat. Tbh, they were actually pretty progressive; again, they didn’t care about your sexuality or gender because as far as they were concerned it wasn’t up to them whether or not Jesus would accept gay people. They were absolutely the stereotypical cringy Christian youth pastors though, and we thought they were the best because of it. Then a lot of church politics happened, which leads into the next footnote. If it weren’t for the politics, I would probably still identify as a Christian and go to that church today (for better or for worse).

    3 Also, yes, that was the general reaction to homosexuality in the church I was in. It was actually a pretty progressive, non-judgemental church, believe it or not, right up until the supreme Court ruled that gay marriage was legal. Then the church’s small conservative faction lost their goddamn minds and managed to take over the church. No, I don’t know how that happened, just that the church went from having fairly progressive and accepting pastors to having an almost all-new cast of bigoted conservatives in the span of a month or two (the remaining pastors were very unhappy and left the church for other ones pretty soon after). They were “tolerant” of homosexuality so long as marriage remained a pure and perfect hetero-only ritual; because Christianity invented the concept of a marital bond.