Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 1.7CC

[Progressive ideology relies on Marx.

When Marx declared that “religion (specifically Christianity and Judaism)” was “the opiate of the masses”, he projected the dark side of “his object that would bring everyone into organization” onto two intriguing, yet inappropriate, victims; that is, Jesus and Moses.

For Marxist thinkpro-object, Jesus and Moses are thinkanti-object.

Jesus was born into a world officially closed to thinkdivine, a world full of iniquity, a world full of misguided suffering, a world filled with the toxic brews of resistance and resentment. Here was a world waiting for parables, hints of good news.

Moses was born into a world officially closed to thinkdivine, a world full of iniquity, a world full of misguided suffering, a world filled with the toxic brews of resistance and resentment. People were waiting for someone to say, “Let us go as a people into the desert to worship our God.”

Against this thinkdivine, Marx offers a delusion: the perfectability of humans.]