Atlas University Podcast

How American Unitarianism was Sabotaged

39 min · 14. juni 2026
episode How American Unitarianism was Sabotaged cover

Description

This book outlines a core thesis that American Unitarianism once possessed the historical opportunity to establish itself as a robust, scripturally grounded alternative to traditional Trinitarian Christianity. The author argues that instead of fulfilling this potential by restoring apostolic monotheism, the movement gradually shifted toward theological liberalism, rationalism, and eventually a post-Christian pluralism through its merger with Universalism. This transformation is framed as a "captured exit," suggesting that the religious establishment maintains its dominance not only through dogma but by neutralizing or degrading any serious external paths for dissenters. By rebranding the Unitarian name as a synonym for doctrinal openness rather than biblical restoration, the system successfully ensured that seekers would find no clear refuge outside of orthodoxy. Ultimately, the sources analyze how this historical drift served to protect the Trinitarian "mark-system" by making the most visible alternative appear unattractive to devout believers. The text concludes that this failure leaves modern seekers stranded in a controlled religious landscape without a socially visible, high-obedience community dedicated to the one Yahweh.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Atlas University Podcast community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

300 episodes

episode The Dead God on the Altar artwork

The Dead God on the Altar

This book argues that Roman Catholicism fundamentally altered the identity of the biblical Messiah by replacing the historical Yeshua with a manufactured, imperial figure called Jesus. The author asserts that this substitution was achieved through a convergence of Roman state power, Apollonian imagery, and Dionysian ritual logic. By analyzing visual theology, the sources claim that the Catholic Mass and its attendant iconography functionally preserve the roles of ancient deities under Christian names. Specifically, Apollo provides the radiant, victorious face of the imperial son, while Dionysus supplies the underlying mechanics for a "sacramental machine" centered on the consumption of a deity. Ultimately, the book frames the Catholic system as a sophisticated form of institutional idolatry that displaces the living Spirit of Yahweh with a priest-controlled, altar-bound object of worship.

24. juni 202647 min
episode The "Fake" Holy Spirit of Christianity artwork

The "Fake" Holy Spirit of Christianity

This book presents a theological critique of the Christianized beast-system, arguing that much of modern religious practice is animated by a counterfeit breathknown as the Spirit of the Image. Drawing from Revelation 13, the author suggests that institutional Christianity has replaced the authentic Ruach of Yahweh with a deceptive, lamb-like religious power that mimics sacred authority through signs, emotional atmospheres, and ecstatic utterances. Central to this thesis is the condemnation of paganized tongues and inner-voice prophecy, which the text classifies as mechanical performances designed to validate human institutions rather than convey divine truth. By contrasting true life with sacred animation, the source asserts that believers are often trapped in a spiritual spell that mistakes system-loyalty for genuine obedience to the Father. Ultimately, the text calls for a rigorous testing of spirits to distinguish the true Yeshua from a manufactured Christ protected by institutional power.

Yesterday41 min
episode The Bodies of Dead Gods artwork

The Bodies of Dead Gods

This book presents a theological and sociological critique of modern institutions, arguing that ancient deities have not vanished but have adapted into administrative systems. The author contends that "dead gods" like Mars, Mammon, and Asclepiuscontinue to receive worship through the "apparatus" of medicine, law, finance, and the state. These systems function as institutional bodies that demand the trust, obedience, and sacrifice originally reserved for Yahweh. By analyzing the anatomy of these systems—from their "heads" of authority to their "immune systems" of censorship—the work exposes how ideology becomes incarnate through professional rituals and bureaucratic protocols. Ultimately, the text calls for a transfer of allegiance away from these counterfeit providences and toward the resurrection body of Yeshua. It concludes that true healing and justice can only be recovered by stripping institutions of their sovereign, priestly status.

22. juni 202652 min
episode The Migration of the Old Gods after Psalm 82 artwork

The Migration of the Old Gods after Psalm 82

This book outlines a theological and sociopolitical thesis centered on Psalm 82, arguing that while God sentenced the ancient rebel "gods" to mortality, these powers persist by migrating into human structures. This movement allows condemned spiritual forces to survive the divine death sentence by inhabiting "bodies" such as emperors, empires, and civic institutions. The author explains that these powers seek vessels—ranging from ancient thrones and cities to modern algorithms, brands, and screens—to continue receiving the worship and obedience denied them by Yahweh. By institutionalizing their influence, these forces hide behind useful functions like medicine, education, and law while secretly distorting justice and "metabolizing" human souls. The sources categorize these manifestations into mortal, imperial, and image-based bodies, illustrating a historical continuity of rebellion that spans from Babylon to the digital age. Ultimately, the text presents the resurrection of Jesus as the definitive counter-strike that exposes these parasitic systems and calls humanity to withdraw its allegiance from these "bodies of the gods."

21. juni 202632 min
episode Was the Story of Legion Actually A Prophecy? artwork

Was the Story of Legion Actually A Prophecy?

This book proposes a maximal reading of the biblical story of Legion, interpreting the event not merely as a miracle but as an enacted prophecy regarding the collapse of imperial systems. The author argues that the "old-god order" of Egypt migrated into Rome and subsequently "hijacked" institutional Christianity through figures like Constantine. Central to this thesis is the distinction between the ekklesia—the true body of "called-out ones"—and the religious structures that preserved imperial hierarchy, death-rituals, and social control under a Christian veneer. By comparing the drowning of the swine to the Exodus judgment of Pharaoh’s army, the source suggests that humanity is currently undergoing a divine cleansing. This process aims to restore the human host by removing the "Roman-Egyptian machinery" that has occupied religious life for centuries. Ultimately, the text serves as a call for believers to undergo a final Exodus from institutional religion to find true spiritual liberation.

20. juni 202621 min