Resistance by Numbers-31

Writer: Numbers-31

Subject: Resistance

Link: Tumblr / 10.11.2025

Resistance

Christians have always shown malice towards other religions by insisting that only their own god is real and that everyone else is worshipping demons. Christians have persecuted Pagans, Jews, Muslims, and even each other throughout the millennia.

Satanism is a resistance movement against the Christian faith. Sure, we have malice, but it is an entirely justified malice. Tolerating the intolerant is itself a form of intolerance. For the sake of all who are not Christian, Christianity must be destroyed!

OTHER SOURCES SAY …

Over the centuries, Christians have persecuted other religions through legislation, forced conversions, massacres, and the suppression of dissent, targeting pagans, Jews, Muslims, and other Christian groups like Protestants and Old Believers. Examples include the Roman Empire’s persecution of pagans and later Christians, the Spanish Inquisition against perceived heretics, the Crusades against Muslims, and widespread violence during religious wars.

Early Christianity and the Roman Empire

  • Anti-pagan laws: After Christianity became the state religion, emperors like Constantius II ordered the closure of pagan temples and banned pagan sacrifices under penalty of death.
  • Targeting heretics: In the Eastern Roman Empire, Emperor Justinian I purged government and church bureaucracies of those who disagreed with him, reflecting a belief that imperial unity required religious unity.
  • Persecution of Jews: Although initially granted exemptions, Jews faced massacres and riots, such as those in the 1st century, for not participating in Roman religious festivals and for refusing to worship Roman gods.

Middle Ages and beyond

  • The Inquisition: Established to combat heresy, inquisitorial tribunals handed over unrepentant heretics to secular authorities for punishment, often burning them at the stake.
  • The Crusades: A series of religiously motivated military campaigns launched by European Christians against Muslims and Jews.
  • Wars of Religion: Conflicts such as the Thirty Years’ War and the Huguenot Wars were fought over religious differences, with both sides persecuting the other.
  • Jews: Accused of deicide and faced discrimination and violence.
  • Protestants: Persecuted by Catholic rulers, like Mary I of England, who earned the nickname “Bloody Mary” for her persecution of Protestants.
  • Catholics: Also faced persecution, such as when Elizabeth I of England enforced laws requiring adherence to the Anglican Church.
  • Old Believers: In Russia, this group was persecuted and executed by the Orthodox Church, and even those who renounced their beliefs were not spared.

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