Christianity is not "cucked", not with almighty God at the head of the Church.
Saint Joseph was not a cuck, Christians do not believe the Mormon nonsense of a physically incarnate god fathering Jesus.
Mary, the virgin mother of God, was a virgin her entire life.
In contrast with other major religions with a broken view of marriage and love, Christianity has a Sacrament of marriage, one man and one woman for life for the glory of God.
I think people who deride Christianity but glorify other religions or belief systems are morons that don't understand Christianity beyond "invisible sky daddy".
Not that I care about being religious. I think any belief system that focuses primarily on mythology and not on action or service is probably going to take the public beating it deserves.
That said, if Christianity went back to its history with the Crusades and introduced swordfighting, people would look down on Christianity a whole lot less.
If it is Christianity, then it must be about bearing fruit. We are in the world but not of the world. The public beating is how you know you're on the narrow path, fighting against the devil and his minions. Wisdom demands we honor tradition, but I wouldn't put swordfighting on a pedestal, you'll only fall off.
Many of the issues present in Christianity are because of its modern focus on the NT and rejection of the old Jewish laws in the OT. There is also the issue with being able to basically find something Jesus or apostles said that favors your perspectives, be it progressive or conservative, and issue also found with Judaism and Islam to a lesser degree.
Like most Western institutions, the churches are also weak, Catholic but also Orthodox, and unable/unwilling to excommunicate faggots and queers that are not even believers, but saboteurs pretending to be Christians.
In short, Christianity needs to renew its focus on Laws, and lay off the spirituality woowoo. The faithful need to behave and be orderly, or get the bonk.
What?
The Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) met and made it binding.
Scripture recognized as divinely inspired elsewhere and Subsequent Councils make it even more explicit. The moral law is eternal, ritual purity law is not generally binding on Christians.
I hear you about wolves in sheep's clothing. The lack of discipline is agonizing, but true spirituality is not a weakness. Lack of fear of God leads to the insanity we see in rebellion and rejection of the unchangeable truths taught by the Church. Fear of God is the beginning of wisdom (Proverbs 9:10, which goes on to say: and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding).
In my country we have the following.
Lutheran church, has women priests and gay kiddy diddlers
Catholic church started sheltering Syrian refugees and other muds
Orthodox: Politisperging over God
New Age: retarded moneypeddling similar to prosperity churches.
Men and what they build are flawed, nothing is stopping you from picking up KJV bible and stay out of the retarded shit focus on faith and God. You do not need churches or priests.
Refer to Matthew 6:6-8.
Men caused decline of organised Christianity, you can still have faith, not in men, but God.
Following a scandalously failed monk like Martin Luther will lead to all kinds of tragic issues, including women playing dress up as priests.
Would you say what you typed about those Catholic Church shelters to the Apostle Philip when he taught the Ethiopian (Acts 8:26-40)? Would you say it to Saint Paul when he taught that all are one in Christ?
The political tragedy playing out in some Orthodox Churches is heartbreaking, they are not loving their brothers as they are called to.
The New Agers are not properly Christians at all, even if they do borrow images and phrases they mean completely different things, a lot like LDS/Mormons and the JW's.
You can pick up a 66 book truncated KJV easily, you can order a full version or even buy it in some shops now I gather, but why on earth would you pick that old translation? It's poetic and lovely, but like the Douay–Rheims published almost simultaneously it doesn't exactly lend itself to modern native English speakers, and the many millions of people for whom English is a second language.