[Actually Kotaku] No Christians Allowed In Game Dev
(diabolical.substack.com)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (35)
sorted by:
A lot of online "tradcaths" you see nowadays are like this. Literal reactionaries (which is perfectly understandable)
“Reactionary” has never made sense to me. Progressives reacted first. They saw society and decided it had to change. Conservatives simply disagreed, and yet they were branded the reactionaries?
When they say "reactionary" like that it's victim-blaming from communists. You're supposed to stoically take it like a bitch instead of reacting in any way such as shouting or screaming in pain. Stop hitting yourself.
My spite isn't strong enough to go catholic or orthodox (yet). But from what I've seen evangelical churches tend to be really welcoming but still based (the ones that don't have women running things, anyway).
I’d be careful. Because Protestant churches have rejected an authority to interpret scriptures for them, they can read and interpret whatever they want into the text and “as long as it sounds good” it’s valid. This is why you see Protestant churches with rainbow gay pride flags, women in charge, and all other sorts of deviancy.
The Catholic Church has its faults, trust me I’m not a cradle Catholic and converted recently, but it’s leagues better because at least they state unequivocally that homosexual sex is a sin, regardless of “love” being present. I’d recommend listening to Pints with Aquinas (it’s a podcast) or feel free to hit me up and I’ll be more than happy to discuss!
ty, I would certainly vet the church and have a sitdown with whoever is running the show an asking some questions
and rejecting any that had women in positions of authority
I’d also encourage you to not take many anti-Catholic arguments at face value. America was founded by Protestants, so they had a bias that ran deep and it’s still observable.
Do your own research, ask questions, talk to folks. The Lord will seek you out if you start making the first steps. I was an atheist and found a copy of Thomas Aquinas’ summa theologiae left behind in a house I was renting. Read through a few pages as a joke, but the depth there was immense and I felt myself being drawn back. A few years later and now I’m a Catholic, and my wife is undergoing RCIA to join me. The Church has its share of problems, but the depth of thought, the beauty, and everything else was immense.