The Hypocrisy of Christian Symbolism

It is funny that Christians should get outraged about the parasite class having sacrificed a few innocent children to their god for their own benefit.

After all, did their own God not sacrifice his own perfectly innocent child? And do they not celebrate that sacrifice precisely because they have gained something from it?

Christians are blind to the evil in their own faith. Blind to how corrupted it has become.

I have no patience with this hypocrisy.

Either all child sacrifice is bad, or all child sacrifice is good.

It's not "this child sacrifice is for the forgiveness of sins" and these children are "for begging favours from our God for our own material benefit"

There are no grey zones in this. Whoever told you Jesus died for your sins, deceived you. Not willingly, not maliciously. They themselves was deceived.

Generations has been deceived. The idea that guilt must be paid in blood, that suffering redeems, that innocence can be exploited for moral bookkeeping has been accepted as "salvation" by generations.

But it is hypocrisy. Christians have no right to be morally outraged, unless they come to see the "beam in their own eyes". Christians are essentially Baal-worshippers with better branding.

What is the "forgiveness of sins"? Is it not personal benefit? Are one not allowed to sin, if it is automatically forgiven? How does that differ from political gain and monetary wealth which are also personal benefits?

Billions have looked at the cross and thought "This is perfect love". Now people are looking at the Epstein files and think "This is completely evil".

If you find the exploitation of children for the "pleasure/power" of the elite to be the height of evil, why do you find the execution of a "Child of God" for your "spiritual relief" to be the height of holiness?

It is a simple yes or no question. Is not all child sacrifice evil?

I have come to despise the cross. But I celebrate his life. And perhaps seen through that lens, "Forgive them for they know not what they do" makes a whole lot more sense.

People are far to unwilling to say "I do not know", but clarity arrives through the opening that question creates. Christians are far to certain about the validity of their beliefs.