Zoe Quinn
(media.scored.co)
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That premise kind of falls apart when the world he's reincarnated to has magic and he's a prodigy with it. The lesson would have been a lot harsher if he was born in non-Russia instead of not-Germany. That way even if he was still born with magical aptitude, he'd have been brutally persecuted for it instead of being made a respected officer in the military.
I think it's generally stable when the magic doesn't work without Tanya being forced to recite the prayers each time. Tanya must submit to the will of God, or else perish. Each time she thinks she's escaped the hell of war, something shifts, someone makes an arbitrary decision, and she's thrown right back into having to pray.
He says the words, but he's filled with spiteful resentment each time. Despite his hubris he's still granted the power to escape danger. Compare to Goblin Slayer where the Priestess' prayers sometimes go unanswered and the spell fizzles because her faith wanes and her actions go against what her goddess desires.
But then he'd just die instead of constantly fumbling into more responsibility when trying to get away from the front lines. Being a godless party member would be eady enough.
Assuming he'd have been able to become a party member. Also he really hates communism, so even if he could have wormed his way into the party it would have been more soul crushing than being given more and more responsibilities in the military.