Understanding Christians: Deceived by Yehubor
author: Temple of Zeus
updated by: High Priest Zevios Metathronos
Christians are not your enemies. They're victims. This distinction matters, and keeping it clear in your mind will save you a great deal of wasted energy.
The average Christian has been under the influence of an extraordinarily powerful programme since childhood. They didn't choose it. It was imposed on them before they had the cognitive tools to evaluate it. Baptised as infants. Indoctrinated through Sunday school. Socially reinforced by family, community, and culture. By the time they're old enough to think independently, the programming is deep enough that most never question it.
This is Yehubor in its purest form: the spiritual pathology of carrying the name of a false God while being completely unaware that the real Gods exist. These people are not evil. They're deceived. And the deception is not their fault.
What You're Dealing With
When a Christian confronts you about your path, they're acting from fear, not knowledge. Robert Lifton's concept of "milieu control" (Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism, 1961) explains the mechanism: the Abrahamic programme creates an enclosed information environment where only approved sources are trusted. Everything outside the boundary is "Satan," "the world," "deception." When they see you standing outside the fence, freely, their fear activates. The aggression you encounter is fear wearing a mask of righteousness.
Some observations from decades of experience:
Christians are more aggressive in groups than alone. One-on-one, many are capable of genuine conversation. In groups, the social reinforcement kicks in and rational discussion becomes impossible. Most Christians have never read their own Bible cover to cover. They know the verses their pastor highlighted. They don't know the ones that contradict the image they've been given (compare John 3:16 with John 3:18, John 3:36, Matthew 25:41, Revelation 21:8). If you're going to engage, knowing the Bible better than they do is the single most effective tool.
The most zealous Christians are often the most spiritually wounded. The fervour correlates with the depth of the fear. Understanding this changes how you respond. You stop seeing an attacker and start seeing someone trapped in Atibilibil: the confusion so total they can't distinguish their prison from their home.
The Zevist Approach
The Zevist position is not to hate Christians. Hate is a waste of spiritual energy when directed at people who can't help what they believe. The system that imprisoned them deserves every bit of your intellectual opposition. The individuals deserve the recognition that they didn't create their own prison.
That said: you're not obligated to tolerate abuse. You're not obligated to engage. If a Christian harasses you, you have every right to end the conversation, walk away, or defend yourself through any appropriate means. The Legal Resources page has information on your rights. Compassion for the deceived doesn't mean submission to the aggressive.
The best response, when it's available, is to live well. To be strong, clear, knowledgeable, and spiritually developed in a way that makes the Christian's claims about "Satanists" obviously absurd. When they expect a degenerate and encounter a practitioner with genuine knowledge and power, the cognitive dissonance does more work than any argument.
The Gods will win. They always have. Christianity is 2,000 years old. The Gods are tens of thousands. The spell will break. It's already breaking. The Family of the Gods grows every day.

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