“Jesus said the poor will always be with us, so we’ll always have time to prove our faith by alleviating their suffering. Therefore it would be a sin to try to end poverty, because it goes against God’s will.”
“The bible says we’ll be persecuted, so if people don’t hate us then we must not be living according to God’s will. We have to be even more annoying in order to prove our faith!”
Can’t tell you how long into my adulthood it took me to unlearn the pattern that “If I can get people to hate me, then I must be doing something right. In fact, if people like me then I must be doing something wrong!”
I mean, even years after dropping christianity, that subconscious pattern was very much still underlying my perceptions and behavior. Sometimes I couldn’t figure out why it was so difficult to make friends, why I always compulsively self-sabotaged. There was this deep-seated feeling of guilt that always accompanied any sign of approval that I received from others. Even today, I feel uncomfortable whenever I receive a compliment or praise (rare because I avoid situations where that might happen).
No no, you heard them, donating to a food bank will fix it all.
That sounds a lot like the conservative christians who use it to argue against government welfare…
It does to me, too, (but they’re being sarcastic here, of course.)
“Don’t tax the church, they provide charity to the needy. It’s the community’s job to provide for the less fortunate, not the government’s.”
“Jesus said the poor will always be with us, so we’ll always have time to prove our faith by alleviating their suffering. Therefore it would be a sin to try to end poverty, because it goes against God’s will.”
Literally the logic I’ve heard from these people…
Depressingly unsurprising. Up there with viewing being opposed as proof that they’re right.
“The bible says we’ll be persecuted, so if people don’t hate us then we must not be living according to God’s will. We have to be even more annoying in order to prove our faith!”
Can’t tell you how long into my adulthood it took me to unlearn the pattern that “If I can get people to hate me, then I must be doing something right. In fact, if people like me then I must be doing something wrong!”
I mean, even years after dropping christianity, that subconscious pattern was very much still underlying my perceptions and behavior. Sometimes I couldn’t figure out why it was so difficult to make friends, why I always compulsively self-sabotaged. There was this deep-seated feeling of guilt that always accompanied any sign of approval that I received from others. Even today, I feel uncomfortable whenever I receive a compliment or praise (rare because I avoid situations where that might happen).