Watch the trailer for the series–and it’s hard to walk away with anything but the impression that God is an oppressor and Satan the liberator.
As a student of philosophy, I understand that there is a case to be made for this portrayal, and it has echoes of the Greek myth of Prometheus who stole fire from the gods and gifted it to man.
What makes the story of Satan different is that in Greek mythology, both the gods and man are driven by appetites and their universe really has no moral order. The story of Satan and Hell is about destroying a preexisting moral order and replacing it with appetites as the highest good.
It is important for Leftists to redeem Hell because it is important to replace the natural moral order as ordained by God with human will. Prometheus giving fire to mankind allowed human beings to climb the ladder from being mere animals to more godlike beings–the goal was to become civilized. Redeeming Satan and sinners is about elevating the animal appetites and putting them at the top of the moral ladder.
God’s moral order must be replaced by human will, or all the transhumanism is not only incoherent but a rebellion against the Good. Drag queens, pedophilia, licentiousness, and hubris are based on a rejection of God’s strictures, and we can’t have that.
Humanism was an attempt to replace God with a rational moral order that mostly maintained Christian morality; transhumanism is based on the principle of “screw it, I will do what I feel like.”
I am not interested in banning shows like this, but I sure as hell am interested in convincing people that our society is going down a very dark and dangerous path. It’s one thing to debate the moral contours of the universe, what exactly God or nature demands of us, and quite another to celebrate embracing the appetites and transitory desires as the highest good.
Nietzsche–no fan of Christianity–hoped that the self-discipline or what he called “ascetic values” that Christian morality could be built upon to inspire a new form of morality–or perhaps you could call it “aspiration”–that would drive human beings to aspire to greatness and creativity. He also worried that the opposite would happen–without Christianity to reign in the appetites, men are left to aspire to smallness and trivial desires.
We are barrelling down the second path, where the greatest desire is for one’s most carnal desires to be embraced and affirmed.
Shows like this are an artistic expression of this latter path–“You be you.”
And not the best version of you.
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