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The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation by Andrew Isker
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“Your female ancestors risked their lives to bear children they knew they would likely weep and mourn over, and the women of Trashworld fear a child might cut into brunch time.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“A group of ten to twelve men, who would die for one another is a thing that is more powerful than an entire division of conscripts.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“This is why the idea of having children has been intentionally socially engineered out of people. The natural impulse to produce offspring has been carefully and deliberately severed from sexual desire, all the cultural and social mores governing sex that funneled the young toward family formation have been demolished. This is why a life of perpetual adolescence is glorified. All of our young people have been psyopsed into adopting the fruitless, nihilistic, and consumeristic lifestyle of the homosexual, whether or not their hearts have been groomed into those particular sexual perversions. The intentionally childless, consumerist, permanent adolescent is gay, whether he sexually desires his same sex or not. It is important for us to be aware that this has been programmed into the hearts of the young, so that we can teach our children to hate it. It is simply not enough to keep your kids from watching movies or having access to the internet when they are in your home. No matter what you do, the magical dark liturgy that runs twenty-four seven will still be out there, and the likelihood that your children will have FOMO (fear of missing out) will be high. But teaching your children to hate it is far more important than keeping it hidden away from them. They should learn specifically why they ought to despise everything from Trashworld. In your house they should mature to recognize that the glories of this disgusting world of ugliness are nothing but hideous monstrosities.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“The job of the reformer is to grab hold of our figuratively trans-ed society’s XY chromosomes and not let go. No matter how much people have been memed and psyopsed into believing they are introverts and conditioned to practice antisocial behaviors, people want to love and be loved. Men and women were designed to not be alone. No one wants to feel like nobody cares about them. Knowing this is a weapon against globohomo; a weapon that you personally can wield powerfully against this hideous, decrepit world.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“In fact, before the Second Great Awakening, traditional liturgies throughout all of the church in all the world—Eastern, Western, Catholic, and Protestant—followed a more or less similar pattern and structure as the Hebrews followed when they drew near in Leviticus. Our ancestors did not mindlessly follow some dead tradition of men before revivalistic evangelicalism sprang up in the 1820s and ’30s, allowing us now to have Hillsong music, smoke machines, and laser lights.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“Because we treat the first two-thirds of the Bible as historical appendices, we miss all that the Bible has to offer about worship.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“In 100 years we have gone from teaching Latin and Greek in High School to teaching Remedial English in college.
Joseph Sobran”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“Without mothers, as opposed to “birthing individuals,” you do not have a civilization. Without mothers nurturing their children, no families, no households can exist. Women, not men, were given wombs to carry children. Women, not men, were given breasts to feed children. Women were designed to be the anchor of their households and the bringers and nurturers of life. One must do violence to the glorious image of God that they bear in order to make them wombless, breastless, pathetic and miserable imitations of men. Until we are willing to admit that feminism, even (especially!) the feminism accepted by conservatives, is a demon goddess responsible for our enslavement, we will remain under the shade of the oaken shrines of Trashworld.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation
“What Is a Household? Perhaps you are unsure of what model has been missing, and so I must first help to explain what a household is.1 It is not merely two married people and any children they may have living under one roof. A household is a micro-nation. A household, like individual men and individual women, has a distinct telos. It exists for a purpose, to pursue a particular goal. Unlike the nuclear-family arrangement of the postwar era, it does not exist merely to perpetuate existence. Producing and raising up future generations is one function of the household, but it is not the only function of it. Our first parents were told to fill the earth and subdue it. The household is the basic unit of conquest. But of those today who actually do get married, the purpose of their union rarely is so purposeful. It is often an instrument of greater consumption for consumption’s sake. Even children are treated as consumer goods, a mere lifestyle choice, rather than the very purpose that God created marriage for. Within such an arrangement, you do not have husbands and wives nor fathers and mothers; you have instead income earner one and income earner two. The purpose is to pool two incomes together to have access to greater and nicer products to consume. A palatial house. A sexier car. Exotic vacations. More stuff for the 1.72 cute, little human pets you have chosen to keep. These are not households in the sense that anyone who has ever lived until the twentieth century would understand them. They are not households. They are economic co-prosperity zones.”
Andrew Isker, The Boniface Option: A Strategy For Christian Counteroffensive in a Post-Christian Nation