Christianity: The Myth That Calls Every Other Myth False

It is absolutely infuriating that Christians—of all people—have the gall to declare that their religion is the one and only truth while dismissing every other belief system as fantasy, delusion, or outright deception. The sheer arrogance required to make such a claim is astounding. They ridicule Greek mythology, laugh at Hindu deities, and mock indigenous spiritual traditions—all while demanding that everyone accept their set of supernatural absurdities as objective reality.

Let’s be crystal clear: Christianity is mythology. It’s a collection of ancient stories, borrowed traditions, and heavily edited scriptures, repackaged as divine truth. The only reason it gets a pass is because it wormed its way into political power centuries ago and has been gaslighting people ever since. If the Roman Empire had favored some other sect, modern Christians might be worshiping Mithras and claiming that was the one true faith. But no, because history played out in their favor, they now stand atop their artificially elevated pedestal, wagging their fingers at every other faith and calling them false.

The Staggering Absurdity of Christian Exclusivism

Christians who insist their religion is the truth love to talk about divine revelation. But if God revealed himself only to a tiny Middle Eastern tribe a few thousand years ago, what does that say about the billions of humans who lived before that? Were they just collateral damage? Why should a child born in rural India today be doomed to eternal damnation because they weren’t lucky enough to be born into the “right” culture?

If Christianity were truly self-evident, why would the vast majority of humanity throughout history not believe in it? Even today, billions reject it. Yet Christians wave this off with condescending nonsense about “blindness” and “spiritual deception.” In their minds, the billions of Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Jews, and atheists are just wrong, while they alone have stumbled upon the Ultimate Truth™.

This isn’t faith—it’s unchecked narcissism.

Faith Is a Delusion, Not a Virtue

One of the most pathetic defenses of Christianity is that it “brings comfort” and “gives life meaning.” So what? So does insanity. If a man walks around believing he’s the Emperor of the Universe and it makes him happy, should we validate his delusion? If a cult convinces its members that they’ll be rewarded in an afterlife, does that make their belief real? Delusion is often more comfortable than reality—but that doesn’t make it true.

Christians brag about how their faith gives them hope. Hope in what? That the universe was handcrafted just for them? That an invisible cosmic dictator is watching their every move, waiting to punish or reward them like a celestial game show host? That their dead loved ones are waiting for them in some paradise?

The fact that these ideas feel good doesn’t mean they’re anything more than wishful thinking. In fact, that’s exactly why they’re so seductive. People cling to Christianity for the same reason they cling to any comforting lie—it spares them from dealing with the terrifying uncertainty of reality. But that doesn’t make it profound. It makes it intellectually dishonest.

Stop Shoving Your Myth Down Everyone’s Throats

What makes Christian arrogance so unbearable isn’t just their belief in their mythology—it’s their obsession with forcing it on others. They want schools to teach it, governments to reflect it, laws to enforce it. They sneer at other religions while demanding that society cater to theirs. They pretend to be persecuted whenever someone dares to challenge their unearned privilege.

Enough is enough. Believe whatever you want, but don’t pretend your myth is anything more than what it is—one story among countless others, no more valid than the legends of Odin or Zeus. And certainly don’t expect rational people to indulge your fantasy.

The world has suffered enough from Christian arrogance. It’s time to call it what it is—delusion, wrapped in entitlement, masquerading as truth.