• @huge_clock@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        This is an oversimplification. In the land of monarchies progressives were pushing for more liberal democratic reforms. Capitalism is the economic manifestation of democratic liberalism. There was a huge desire to keep religion out of politics at the time of the American Revolution l’est society return to the divine rule of kings and queens. This is why separation of church and state is enshrined in the constitution.

        Over time power structures changed and the largely white protestants that established the wealth and dominant culture of the land developed a political ideology around preservation of the status quo. This is where the word ‘conservative’ comes from. So it’s not that capitalism co-opted religion, it’s that the religious and the wealthy are hugely overlapping segments in America.

      • @glockenspiel@lemmy.world
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        611 months ago

        If Christ and capitalism are at odds capitalism always wins.

        Excellent statement. A good example of this happening is with usury/charging interest. The churches forbade it in most forms for a very long time,only permitting it on a wide scale in the 16th century. Coincidentally, just so happens to be when capitalism was rising. Totally a coincidence I’m sure.

    • @rockerface@lemm.ee
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      3511 months ago

      Isn’t there a story in the Bible where Jesus kicks the merchants out of a church and punches them?

      • SeaJ
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        1211 months ago

        He flipped over tables and straight up whipped the merchants and money changers calling them thieves.

      • @eestileib
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        1011 months ago

        Jesus is irrelevant to ------ianity.

        Leviticus & Romans, that’s all you need.

        • prole
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          811 months ago

          Nah, it’s situational. Parts are relevant when they need to be and irrelevant when they need to be. It’s convenient like that.

        • @RegularGoose@sh.itjust.works
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          611 months ago

          Jesus and the teachings of christianity in any of its forms are irrelevant to a functional modern society. Anyone who uses any parts of the bible beyond a few cherry-picked, out of context, touchy-feely bits as a foundation for their morality is almost certain to be a worse person for it.

          • @eestileib
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            511 months ago

            Oh I went to a Christian school, read it all, did the textual analysis of the different pentateuch authors, that stuff.

            And what do Christians actually quote from all that? Shit from leviticus and romans about hating gay people. That’s what matters.

            And at weddings people read “love is kind…” before that Khalil Gibran poem about the temple columns.

            Truly, contemporary Christians are receiving their reward.

            • Zeppo
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              211 months ago

              They do like Genesis too, as far as “original sin” meaning everyone is born doomed, and Eve meaning all women are bad.

    • @watson387@sopuli.xyz
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      811 months ago

      Christianity is the perfect religion for capitalists. They can do all the harm they want while they’re alive and all they have to do is ask for forgiveness to go to heaven.

      • I’d argue against that. Your average North American christian church, on the other hand, has been molded to support this kind of attitude.

        If any of the stories are true*, it’s the active, practicing red-letter Christians who will get into heaven. Everyone else (see: the majority of church goers) get to burn with the rest of us. Remind followers of the idol of the church of this often, at every opportunity.

        *I personally don’t believe they are, but still find value in Christian thought that’s actually wrestled with (and the people that do so) rather than just parroting the agendas and corruptions of others.