There are two very different kinds of new paganism. The l…
There are two very different kinds of new paganism.
The lefts paganism is consistent with the very nature and biological background of feminine, collectivist ideology. A strange mixture of atheism, materialism and some kind of nature and universe worship suits the left perfectly fine.
The new paganism on the right, on the other hand, seems to come from throwing out the child with the bathwater. There is an understandable suspicion against the Judeo-Christian tradition that drives people to the paganism of the olden times.
But in contrast to the left, this seems rather forced and opposed to the character of the ideology itself.
Because they can't accept the dogma of Christianity, Islam, or Judaism, for a variety of good reasons, they abandon monotheism altogether and fall back to paganism, looking for more consistency, order and freedom - but in a place where it cannot be found.
But God doesn’t rely on dogma and He most certainly doesn't fit in a book. Just because you can't find God where people tell you to look, doesn’t mean He isn't there.
Maybe instead of giving up on finding green pastures where the herd has already passed through, just to go back to the old cattle staple, you'll have to find your own path, work on your own soul, let go of everything you think you know and everything you've been told.
What have you done to find God besides looking at other people’s ideas of God and finding them lacking and inconsistent?
The right would be well advised to distance itself from the atheism, paganism, luciferianism and satanism of the left. And yes, this can be done without subscribing to the dogma of organized religion corrupted by time and power.
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In the West, the word "religion" often carries a narrow meaning — something private, limited to spiritual beliefs, rituals, or worship that one does on specific days or in designated places like churches or temples.
But Islam is far broader and deeper than that. It's not just about rituals; it's a complete system of life. Here's how:
🌍 Islam Regulates Every Aspect of Life
In Islam, every action — from eating and sleeping to governing, trading, treating neighbors, and even the way one smiles — can be an act of worship if done with the right intention. The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said:
“Verily, actions are but by intentions…”
(Sahih Bukhari & Muslim)
This means Islam isn't just something you practice in a mosque; it's something that guides how you live every moment.
📘 The Term "Religion" Falls Short
The Arabic word used in the Qur’an is "Dīn" (دين) — and this is very different from how the English word religion is understood.
Dīn comes from a root that implies debt, obedience, and judgment — it's about a way, a system, or a path one follows entirely.
Islam as a Dīn is meant to govern your morals, laws, social structure, economic dealings, spiritual state, and personal behavior.
So when the Qur'an says:
"Indeed, the only Dīn with Allah is Islam."
(Surah Aal-Imran 3:19)
It means the only complete and true system of life acceptable to Allah is Islam — not just a "religion" in the Sunday-morning sense.
🧭 Examples of Islam as a Way of Life
Spiritual: Five daily prayers, fasting, remembrance of Allah.
Economic: Prohibition of interest (riba), encouragement of charity (zakat), fairness in trade.
Social: Rights of neighbors, family duties, kindness to animals.
Legal: Penal codes, contracts, justice system.
Personal: How to eat, dress, speak, and even how to sleep — all taught in the Sunnah.
Every area of life is touched by guidance from the Qur’an and Sunnah — nothing is left out.
🕊️ Final Thought
Islam doesn't divide life into sacred and secular — everything is interconnected u…
The word you are looking for is "totalitarian" Islam has a tendency to micromanage the lives of everyone in its sphere of influence and punishes those who don't bend over.