Here is what The Satanic Temple claims:
The Satanic Temple is a non-theistic religion that views Satan as a literary figure who represents a metaphorical construct of rejecting tyranny and championing the human mind and spirit. After School Satan Club does not attempt to convert children to any religious ideology. Instead, The Satanic Temple supports children to think for themselves. All After School Satan Clubs are based on activities centered around the Seven Fundamental Tenets and emphasize a scientific, rationalist, non-superstitious worldview.
Yes, they are a “religion” as they state. But “non-theistic” means anti-theistic.
It’s important to note there is no neutral position. One is either for or against Christ. One builds their house (worldview) on the rock or sand. For instance, when someone claims there are no absolutes, that is their one absolute. A “rationalist” worldview is an anti-supernatural one, which means an anti-God worldview—an anti-Christian worldview.
The claim that they support “children to think for themselves” is ludicrous. Their whole motivation is to indoctrinate children into an anti-God religion—the religion of naturalism. It’s the religion of man worshipping man. It’s the religion of teaching them that man is his or her own god (Romans 1). They are imposing their particular worldview on children.
Parents need to understand the real nature of these Satan clubs—to indoctrinate children against the Christian worldview. They are anti-God religious clubs.
The logical outcome of this religion is believing that life ultimately has no purpose or meaning and when one dies, one ceases to exist. So what’s the point of it all anyway? You might as well be your own god, decide who you want to be, do whatever you want, write your own rules, treat people the way you decide to if you think you can get away with it—because “life is meaningless anyway.”
Calling Evil Good And Good Evil: What In The World Is Happening On College Campuses?
On Dec. 5, when the presidents of three of America’s most prestigious universities appeared before Congress during a hearing on rising antisemitism, they refused to state clearly whether or not calls for the genocide of Jews on their campuses would constitute bullying or harassment. Across the country, jaws dropped.
More than one political pundit noted that the presidents of Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania appeared to have been coached by lawyers to speak cautiously. The result: They came off as morally detached from the world in which most Americans live. Or perhaps, as conservative author Rod Dreher put it, “They hemmed, they hawed, they tried to ‘contextualize’ the outbursts from left-wing students, so that they could stay on the right side of the woke narrative.”
Their inability to heartily condemn the idea of genocidal, antisemitic speech at their schools left many Americans to wonder: What in the world is happening on college campuses?
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