고정된 트윗
The ❌
306 posts

The ❌
@TheRedXtwo
alt for @TheRedX which is currently ghost banned. Will be inactive on there for a few days to fix it
가입일 Şubat 2025
246 팔로잉314 팔로워
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함


@russianspybot He’s probably super successful and has no goy thoughts like that whatsoever
English

@TheRedXtwo i wonder if that guy every gets any unnoticed head turns when ever he has to read out his plate for a oil change or what ever like "uh yeah my plate is uhh... hang on... yeah! "G-O-Y, Fourteen Eighty Eight"
English
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함

People often picture Christian faith as either blind acceptance of old stories or just cultural habit. But some of history's sharpest minds have seen it differently: as a full-blooded way of living that brings reason, emotion, and our deepest hunger for meaning together. Far from clashing with philosophy, this kind of belief seems to round it out and make sense of the whole human experience.
It starts with recognizing something fundamental about us. As Augustine wrote in his Confessions, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.” No achievement, relationship, or thrill ever manages to quiets that inner itch. Christianity doesn't ignore it either, it explains the itch and offers the answer through a God who entered our messy world in the person of Jesus, offering a path to real rest that nothing else touches.
Even straight philosophy has a way of nudging thoughtful people back toward the divine. Francis Bacon captured it well in his Essays: “A little philosophy inclineth man’s mind to atheism; but depth in philosophy bringeth men’s minds about to religion.” Scratch the surface and you might dismiss God, but wrestle with big questions such as:
“Why does the cosmos follow laws we can discover?”
“Where does our sense of right and wrong come from?”
“How do we account for beauty that stops us in our tracks?”
Then suddenly the door to something greater cracks open again. It's that old Christian idea of faith and reason working hand in hand, not as enemies.
This isn't about pitting one against the other. Anselm of Canterbury put it like this: he didn't try to understand first so he could believe; he believed in order to understand. Aquinas took that idea and ran with it, laying out arguments that pure reason can get you to a necessary starting point for everything—a First Cause that lines up with what Christians call God. Reason gets you to the edge; faith carries you across.
Still, logic alone has its walls. Blaise Pascal knew this when he said, “The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of.” There's an intuitive pull, a personal resonance that hits before you can diagram it out. Faith isn't just adding up evidence like a math problem, it's encountering something alive.
Kierkegaard took the idea even further. For him, faith represents the peak of human passion. It's that daring step into the unknown, embracing the wild paradox of God showing up as a man. You don't water it down to make it safe or “reasonable” in a narrow sense. Real belief asks for your whole self—intellect, will, and all the uncertainty that comes with it. Anything less turns God into an abstract idea instead of a living reality.
And once it clicks, the change is total. C.S. Lewis described it perfectly: “I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.”
Morality stops feeling like random rules. Pain finds purpose in the story of the Cross. Hope stretches beyond the grave. The universe no longer looks like blind chance but like a place with intention, where love matters because it's rooted in the character of its Maker.
In the end, choosing to be Christian in this deeper sense means living as though the world is a home rather than a fluke. It doesn't shut down questions—it gives them a framework worth wrestling with. It satisfies the brain's need for coherence, the soul's cry for connection, and our built in drive toward purpose.
Other philosophies have their strengths, no doubt, and they're worth exploring on their own terms. But this path has drawn some of the greatest minds because it doesn't settle for half answers. It invites us to step in, risk the leap, and discover what it really means to be fully alive and at rest.

English

@TheRedXtwo The craziest part is, is that it was a random tag.
Plates here are "letter-letter-letter-number-number-number-number"
English
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함

@nottoday_kate You have so much skill and cradt in what you do. Dont forget that
English
The ❌ 리트윗함
The ❌ 리트윗함

@Xisofuckingay Exactly, and we should be proud. It’s not our fault that the US architecture has become one big bland gray blob. We will take it back to this greatness sooner than later
English

@TheRedXtwo Real. History is littered with amazing structures only White men could achieve. It really is something to be proud of.
English














