Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
100 years of false religion
100 years of false religion
Oct 27, 2025 12:21 PM

Today – November 7, 2017 – marks the hundredth anniversary of the Russian Revolution, touching off worldwide events mourning or celebrating the event. At its centenary, Communism deserves to be remembered as the most successful false religion to take root in the West in two millennia, unparalleled in the swiftness of its destruction and unequaled in its potential to generate misery from abundance.

Communism determined to overthrow the entire Judeo-Christian cosmology 100 years ago today. Karl Marx’s promise of an earthly bliss – in which an all-powerful state instituted by violent revolution suddenly withers away – demanded an abundance of faith. Yet that pales parison to its promises for the human race. Leon Trotsky wrote in Literature and Revolution that New Soviet Man would “raise himself to a new plane, to create a higher social biologic type, or, if you please, a superman.”

Communist man … will develop all the vital elements of contemporary art to the highest point. Man will e immeasurably stronger, wiser and subtler; his body will e more harmonized, his movements more rhythmic, his voice more musical. The forms of life will e dynamically dramatic. The average human type will rise to the heights of an Aristotle, a Goethe, or a Marx. And above this ridge new peaks will rise.

Marxism matched Messianic pretensions with all the accoutrements of a religion. “Bolshevism,” wrote Bertrand Russell, is “a religion, with elaborate dogmas and inspired scriptures.” Placards of Soviet leaders replaced religious icons. The calendar filled with mock holy days. Acton’s John Couretas has noted that anthems to Stalin incorporated poetic elements of Byzantine Christian hymns.

Communism: The second-oldest faith

By 1949, its deserters branded Communism The God that Failed. No apostate better exposed the nature of Marxism than Whittaker Chambers, who wrote in Witness that Communism is “man’s second oldest faith”:

Its promise was whispered in the first days of the Creation under the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil: “Ye shall be as gods.” It is the great alternative faith of mankind. … The Communist vision is the vision of Man without God. … Copernicus and his successors displaced man as the central fact of the universe by proving that the earth was not the central star of the universe. Communism restores man to his sovereignty by the simple method of denying God.

With the denial of the West’s God came the repudiation of His moral code enjoining murder, lying, or violation of private property – especially Church property. For instance in 1931, newly socialist-dominated Spain passed a new constitution despoiling religious orders. It imposed upon monks and nuns a “ban on exercising merce, oreducation”until such time as “their assetswill be nationalized and [redistributed]to charitable andeducational ends.”

Thenfollowed their mass rape and murder of clergy – a process not spared the faithful. Ismael Virto was six years old when a socialist mob barged into his home at the outset the Spanish Civil War. “They took whatever weapons we had,” he remembered. “But then they saw it, and we knew we were [in danger]: My grandfather had a life-sized crucifix in his bedroom. And to these guys, the Church was their enemy.” Anne Applebaum writes in her new book, Red Famine, that the same door-to-door ransacking preceded Ukraine’s Holodomor.

Once the state seized all means of self-preservation, liquidation began. Communism claimed approximately 100 million souls in less than a century. The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation (VOC) places a reasonable range anywhere from 42,870,000 to 161,990,000. And in nations such as North Korea, the toll continues to climb.

Death is demanded by this heresy’s secular demonology. For people of faith, supernatural forces influence the children of Eve in an unseen warfare that ceases only in the peace of the heavenly kingdom. Materialists, whether of the totalitarian “Right” or “Left,” seek to erect their utopia on earth. Their demons are flesh and blood – the bourgeoisie, the Jews, “lower” races – who must be obliterated for its inauguration.Observing this, Chambers concluded that “God alone is the inciter and guarantor of freedom.”

Despite its economic failure and appeal to strife, more Millennials prefer socialism than capitalism; 23 percent called Stalin a “hero.” Meanwhile, a Russian poll named Stalin that nation’s most admired man, with Lenin ranking third. At every point in between, Che Guevara’s mock icon adorns everything from college dorm rooms to a new Irish stamp.

The predictable pathology of persecution

Young people must understand the predictable pathology of persecution: First, collectivists gain absolute power within the state. Then, they strip people of faith of the means toprotect themselves, both literally (by seizing weapons) and potentially (through wealth redistribution). The velvet hammer then falls upon the helpless victims.

The faith that built Western civilization endorses economic exertion as a means allowing every person to provide for self and others. It believes, in John Locke’s phrase, that government may not without due process take away “what tends to the preservation of the life, the liberty, health, limb, or goods of another.”

More than that, true religion sees work a means of temporal and eternal sanctification. The Orthodox saint Justin Popovic (d. 1979) wrote:

God works and man collaborates; God creates through man and man creates through God; here the divine creation is continued through man.To this end, man brings out of himself all that is divine and puts it into action, creation and life.In this creativity, all that is divine, not only in man but also in the world around him, is expressed and brought into action; all that is divine is active, and all that is human joins in this activity.

Heavenly bliss, in any es about“only bytheanthropic means: through the evangelical virtues of faith and love, hope and prayer, fasting and humility, meekness passion, love for God and one’s fellow-man.”

plementary economic order leaves rational man free to choose how to offer this sacred service. The unique path of each person’s sanctity are a mystery implanted by God and for each individual to discover. In giving the gift of freedom, it respects the defining value of the West: the inviolable and infinite value of every human person who, by virtue of bearing the image and likeness of God, has been raised to inestimable heights.

Kitzmiller. This photo has been cropped. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
‘Reforming Natural Law’
The January 2007 issue of First Things features a lengthy review of Stephen Grabill’s new book on Protestant natural law thinking (no link to the review, unfortunately). J. Daryl Charles, an assistant professor at Union University, has this to say about Grabill’s Rediscovering the Natural Law in Reformed Theological Ethics (Eerdmans, 2006): Grabill’s examination of theological ethics in the Protestant Reformed mainstream is pelling, and it represents a shot across the bow of theological ethics, as it were. Protestants for...
More than a Social Gospel
In a much discussed op-ed for CNN last week, hipster church leaders Marc Brown and Jay Bakker (the latter’s profile, incidentally, immediately precedes that of yours truly in The Relevant Nation…a serendipitous product of alphabetical order) lodge plaint against Christianity that doesn’t respect the call “love others just as they are, without an agenda.” Speaking of Jesus, Brown and Bakker write, “The bulk of his time was spent preaching about helping the poor and those who are unable to help...
Today’s Word from Solzhenitsyn
From the new Solzhenitsyn Reader, which I highly mend (especially if you are behind on your Christmas shopping): Human society cannot be exempted from the laws and demands which constitute the aim and meaning of individual human lives. But even without a religious foundation, this sort of transference is readily and naturally made. It is very human to apply even to the biggest social events or human organizations, including whole states and the United Nations, our spiritual values: noble, base,...
Rediscovering the Natural Law in Reformed Theological Ethics
Stephen Grabill delivers his address at today’s Lord Acton Lecture Series Event Stephen J. Grabill, Acton’s Research Scholar in Theology, delivered an address today based upon his new book which explores plex and often-overlooked relationship between Protestantism and natural law. In Rediscovering the Natural Law in Reformed Theological Ethics, Grabill calls upon Christian ethicists, theologians, and laypersons to take another look at this vital element in the history of Christian ethical thought. He appeals to Reformation and post-Reformation era theologians...
Marriage and the Black Family
I recently received a letter from a reader of my Acton Commentary column, "Marriage as a Social Justice Issue," which she had seen reprinted in modified form at Town Hall. My correspondent was concerned that I had overlooked a key fact: the lack of marriageable black men. She said, in part: Education and the lower number of available black men are 2 major things you left out of your article. I know that marriage is important in the munity, but...
Costs of Aggressive Population Control
The children of the Chinese One-child policy are finding new obstacles in their paths: no one wants to hire them. Incredible, but true. It seems that many of the only children have been so pampered by their parents, that employers do not find them suitable workers. Some have called these children, "Little Emperors," because their parents dote on them so thoroughly. Evidently, this is not good preparation for working in the global economy! Recently, China Daily reports, the Sinohydro Engineering...
Hasta La Vista, Siesta
In this week’s Acton Commentary, Anthony Bradley takes a look at the Spanish economy as it faces a “dilemma,” as he puts it, “simultaneously needing immigrants and seeking to curb them.” Bradley also notes that “institutions like marriage and family seem silly to many Spaniards.” As APM’s Marketplace reports, shifting trends in Spain might claim another Spanish institution, the siesta. A variety of factors, including petition with labor forces in other nations, are leading some to question the viability of...
Would You Change the Sign?
Seth Godin wants to know. ...
Creepy Libertarianism, Creepy Statism
Rick Ritchie responds to this New Atlantis article by Peter Lawler, “Is the Body Property?” in a recent post on Daylight. Lawler discusses the increasingly broad push modify the human body, especially in the context of organ sales. Lawler writes of “the creeping libertarianism that characterizes our society as a whole. As we understand ourselves with ever greater consistency as free individuals and nothing more, it es less clear why an individual’s kidneys aren’t his property to dispose of as...
For More on the Black Family
…check out the helpful website by the Seymour Institute. Founded by the Rev. Gene Rivers in Boston, the Institute brings together information and tools to advocate for marriage in the munity. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved