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Practical History: The Spread of “Christianity”

Posted by Bob on March 16th, 2008 under History


LAWRENCE Brown,whose comments are not always friendly, has some good things to say about the early Christian missionaries to Northern Europe. He says they went in with the Good News of Jesus Christ. He says their obvious love of their fellow man was the best asdvertisement for their faith.

I would add that one thing our “barbarian” ancestors respected was COURAGE. Those men went into places where Roman Armies dared not tread and often, cheerfully, paid the price.

Now the PRACTICAl point. What the early missionaries did NOT go into Northern Europe with was the Middle eastern Wordist rot that had accumulated around the Gospel in the Church.

Bible-thumpers keep telling us that the Bible, i.e., Chrsitanity, is 70% Old Testament.

Try to imagine this picture of the early missionaries. They are in a boat with the entire set of scrolls that make up the Old Testament. The potential converts sit around and listen to hundreds of thousands of words of what even C.S. Lewis admits is a mythology far interior in quality to that of Northern Europe.

No, those missionaries carried the GOSPEL, not in texts, but in their hearts. The Middle Eastern crap was a dirty trick that came AFTER our forefathers had listened to the Good News itself.
We know that the Gothic Church was of the Arian Heresy Wolfila brought with him. We do not know WHICH version of the Good News, in the terms of later ruling theologians, each of those other early missionaries carried.

I don’t think it matters.

Missionaries to Northern Europe carried Christianity without the quotation marks. Wordist “Christianity” came later.

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  1. #1 by shari on 03/16/2008 - 1:18 pm

    In some way or another, I think that everybody who is concerned about white survival, has a problem, whether a christian or big, tough, non-beleiver. We just can’t see very far ahead. And we are not all that sure of what we can hang on to of the past. It is a bottle neck, and we NEED a broader view.

    This is where things like “Practical History” and “SUB Urban” are really helpful. I pass them on, although I really don’t know what anybody thinks.

    I don’t see anything here that is faith destroying. Wordism would have HAD to come in, and perhaps even served some purpose for a while. But when it doesn’t serve us anymore, it’s time to get rid of it, while keeping what should never be gotten rid of. This is where I think that we are historically. It’s a feverous time but “Courage, God mend all.”

  2. #2 by Pain on 03/18/2008 - 7:11 pm

    Actually, we have the historical record of what our Nordic forefathers loved best in the Bible: the Old Testament.

    The reason is that they loved the battles and exhibitions of heroism, which was the books of history are all about.

    What C.S. Lewis meant by “mythology” was very specific. He was talking about the stories involving magic, supernatural beings, and other worlds — things that we would assume were based on using mushrooms. The Old Testament is more factual in tone.

    Besides the histories of “mighty men of valor” slaying foreigners (the allophyles appearing thousands of thousands of times in the LXX), a particular favorite book was the Book of Enoch, before it disappeared for a time. That book is a detailed story of supernatural beings — angels, giants, and monsters — and the genetic experiments producing the monsters, which were hybrids.

    In other words, the God of the Old Testament judged the world with the flood because the world was filled with interracial hybrids.

    And what is the overarching message of the Old Testament?

    The Old Testament is a religion of race in which interracial sex was punished by instant death — a parable of things spiritual.

    This is why our forefathers picked up the new religion so readily. They knew what race was, they knew what loyalty was all about.

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