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When we remake Jesus into a figure who endorses political aggression, who sanctions violence in defense of Christian civilization, we are not recovering some neglected truth. We are committing idolatry.
The sheer diversity of religious belief appears to vindicate the relativist position. But the ancient biblical narrative itself predicts precisely this situation—accounting for religious diversity not as evidence against a single divine story, but as the tragic consequence of humanity's repeated attempts to write alternative ones.
We live in a world fascinated by ancient mysteries. Yet curiously, when the Bible mentions such figures, we often dismiss them as mythology. Take Nimrod, for instance — a figure who connects to some of history's greatest cities and yet remains largely unknown.