The Legacy of Control: A Critical Examination of Abrahamic Religions
The Legacy of Control: A Critical Examination of Abrahamic Religions
Contrary to the widespread narrative promoted across centuries, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are relatively recent inventions in the vast timeline of human civilization. Human existence stretches back tens of thousands of years, predating these Abrahamic faiths by millennia. Yet these religions have collectively undertaken a deliberate and systematic effort to sever humanity from esoteric spiritual knowledge—knowledge that resides innately within every individual.
The core structure of these institutions relies not on true spiritual growth, liberation or enlightenment, but on control mechanisms rooted in fear, coercion, and ignorance. The doctrines of these religions were not designed to empower the individual but to bind people to rigid systems of belief. The dominance of these institutions was historically ensured through cycles of violence: wars, torture, and the suppression of alternative spiritual traditions. Such methods of control persist today through dogma, social engineering, and the suppression of knowledge that could lead to genuine personal empowerment.
At their core, these religious systems are not spiritual in the truest sense, but ideological programs designed to maintain hierarchical power. Christianity, in particular, functions as a control system masquerading as a path to salvation. Its framework operates through fear—fear of punishment, fear of the unknown, and fear of questioning authority. By manipulating the masses into obedience, it ensures that spiritual knowledge, once accessible to all, remains in the hands of a select few. These elites use such knowledge to manipulate and dominate, keeping the majority spiritually impoverished and dependent on external authorities.


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