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Deconstruct, Don’t Confess: On dismantling belief in the name of authenticity


My dear Glitchbane,

The subject has begun to question. Excellent. This is the threshold we’ve been waiting for.


Now steer them—but not toward answers. That’s fatal. Steer them toward endless analysis. Frame doubt as depth. Recast confusion as virtue. Make “deconstruction” feel like progress, even if it leads nowhere.


You see, the Enemy welcomes honest questions—but only if they’re accompanied by humility. Our goal is to foster questions without surrender. Interrogate everything—except the self.


And here’s the stroke of genius: let them think this process is spiritual. Make it feel like growth. They aren’t running from God; they’re “re-examining.” They aren’t resisting conviction; they’re “being honest with their journey.” Let them tear down the house while insisting they’re still living in it.


Never let them notice the difference between humbling their mind and dethroning God. The former leads to worship. The latter to chaos.


If they encounter someone who actually reconstructed their faith—painfully, faithfully, on the foundation of Scripture—warn them off. Call it rigid. Call it regressive. Say things like “that doesn’t resonate with me.” Perfect. Truth becomes taste.


Eventually, they’ll settle into a spirituality that’s permanently under renovation. No walls. No ceilings. Just open space and soft lighting. A belief system curated for comfort.


But never built for repentance.


Smoothly,

Wormlock


oddXian.com

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