...when you belong to a religion that tells you to dismiss logic and reason in favor of faith and obedience, it’s not that big of a leap for worshipers to accept a difference kind of mythology. If the members of your church are spreading QAnon memes online, then maybe you weren’t doing that great of a job teaching them how to think for themselves.

That’s not specific to evangelicals, obviously. But many of the factors that make a church grow and thrive — a sense of shared purpose, a feeling of knowing something others don’t understand, a desire for knowledge in any form — are the same weapons being used by online conspiracists. If those pastors, who rightly reject QAnon and just want their members back, don’t understand the role Christianity played in convincing people to adopt comforting myths that defy common sense, they have no chance of “saving” the people who need to be rescued.

  • Shinji_Ikari [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    i've been thinking lately about how hard it would be to pretend to be Q, slowly build up trust, then instigate infighting to destabilize the Q folks.

    • Owl [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Bring a buddy along, nobody has to know you're not one person.