Sadly, what this too often equates to isn't just exclusivity, but superiority. "Believe on Jesus or suffer eternal damnation!" It's the ideology of winners and loser, ordained and sanctioned by the God of an elitist religion. So is it really any surprise that these Christians approve of an economic system that does the same?
If anyone confuses the gift of grace with a merit system the problem isn't the belief system but their approach to it.
I wrote: by asserting this claim [elitism] against the larger claims of the majority you set yourself in an exclusive and superior position.
I'm immune to this sort of "turn the table" tactic, because I know I'm not innocent, and I also know that doesn't matter to the point at hand.
That wouldn't make you immune, only a hypocrite and that would relieve you of the authority of your objection.
A great many Christians miss the "point of the cross", and of forgiveness, and of turning the other cheek, and of a whole lot of things you and I think Jesus taught. Why is that? Was Jesus that bad of a teacher? Or has the religion created in his name been promoting the wrong ideas?
Or maybe it's my old burning field problem. Seventy seven percent of the U.S. population lay claim to the Christian religion. There are over three hundred million people in the United States. So around two hundred and thirty million people and you've likely met or seen how many of those?
re: on comparing Christians to Nazis
Let me go back then...
I have no doubt whatever that the same could be said for most German citizens during the nazi era.
Okay, a slight qualification, you compared them to facilitators of the Nazis. So not the actual butchers, but the people who fed them, housed them, did their dry cleaning and generally made their existence possible.
It's a thin distinction.
I pointed out that nice people are often complicit in atrocious behaviors.
Okay, I disagree. I think that what you do is ultimately make whatever "nice" is valueless.
You really love this "no true Scotsman" defense.
You can't actually line up what I'm saying with that.
A decent human being doesn't facilitate genocide. Why? because by definition a "decent" human being is one who is "conforming with generally accepted standards of respectable or moral behavior."
The Nazi state didn't do that, which is why no one attempting to hide from responsibility for atrocities behind the facade of legality within the German system had any luck doing it.
...now days, as we watch our savage economy drive millions of Americans into poverty and debt while it feeds the greed of multi-billionaires, the Christians are shouting their support for an even more "free market". And for even less aid to those being driven into poverty. And for even stronger punishments for those who are being driven to the despair of addiction and crime just to survive the day.
When the nation is prosperous, as it has been in fairly recent times, the population is largely happy and there is a plenty that floats a great many of those boats you're considering with enough surplus to help those who through no fault of their own don't find a measure of prosperity.
I've noted a few problems I find in the system, but the important part of our disagreement here is your seeming assertion that because the system has serious flaws the response to it should be abandonment. Better to fix what needs fixing in a system that has produced a standard of living among adherents to its principles unrivaled in the history of compacts.
There either are no Christians in America, or there are a whole lot of Christians who are very complicit in the atrocities of our political, economic, and justicial system.
Or there's another opinion or opinions that don't share your judgment on either our system or the solution to the problems all of us can agree exist in it to one extent or another.
"Believe on Jesus or suffer eternal damnation!"
I'd say reconcile yourself to God or be separate. But my point was that the starting point of dehumanization is typically the sort of hostility you're evidencing toward the majority (when you think to separate them) of Christians. To you they're complicit in moral evil.
And what do we do about those who are complicit in moral evil and working a harm against the decent, suffering populace?
Better to advance the good you see and the way toward it.
No, I can simply see them in a way that they cannot (and will not) see themselves.
A racist could say that to a minority member.
And in a way that you cannot or will not see them, either, apparently.
A way I find mostly distorted and wrong headed, so sure.
It doesn't make me "superior". It doesn't make me think I'm superior. I couldn't care less about being superior.
If you didn't find your position superior you couldn't judge from it and you wouldn't advance its conclusions as anything other than another way to see a thing.
Anyone can say lots of things about me.
Likely, but the point is that the literal, same charge is logically as applicable resting on what you've rested it on.
And some of them will probably be true. But that's not really relevant to the point at hand. I don't have to be perfect or innocent to be right about what I see going on around me.
So, "Yes, I may be but that's not important, what is important is the next guy and the new one we should be ripping in him".
Or, everyone wants to change the world one person at a time and that person is always someone else.