Karl Marx was not just some economist scribbling theories in obscurity who happened to have a stroke of luck in becoming a household nameāhe was the architect of a worldview that treats envy as virtue, revolution as redemption, and the State as god. What began in the shadowy corners of 19th-century philosophy has since evolved into a global parasite, changing its face, its vocabulary, even its uniforms, but never its soul.
In universities, it now speaks in academic jargon and intersectional buzzwords, baptizing class struggle with the language of race, gender, and climate. In corporate boardrooms, it wears the suit and tie of ESG compliance. In public schools, it recites Critical Theory like catechism.
And in churchesāperhaps most tragicallyāit creeps in through sermons about āequityā and ājustice,ā spoken by pastors like David Platt or Matt Chandler who are too naive or too cowardly (or not) to see that theyāre preaching a gospel that isnāt Christās.
Marxism today is not a corpse of a defeated system. Itās a shapeshifterāalive, adaptive, relentlessāyet always working from the same blueprint⦠tear down, divide, and control.
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Karl Marx wasnāt just wrong, thoughāhe was catastrophically, cosmically, flaming-Hindenburg wrong. And yet, like a theological cockroach crawling out from under the floorboards of a collapsed civilization, his ideas refuse to die. They mutate, rebrand, and reemerge, dressed in new jargon, armed with new hashtags, but always preaching the same tired gospel of envy, theft, and bloodshed.
You can spot it everywhere once you know what to look for. Itās the smirking undergrad with a Che Guevara T-shirt who canāt define āinflation,ā the smug HR drone enforcing āinclusion metricsā with the subtlety of a gulag warden, and the wide-eyed activist preaching collectivism on a phone made by capitalist billionaires. All of them disciplesāwhether they know it or notāof a failed prophet whose grand utopia never delivered anything but piles of corpses and ration lines.
Marxism is not a political theory either. It’s a parasitic religion for the terminally aggrieved. It canonizes resentment, sanctifies theft, and replaces the Kingdom of God with a bureaucratic meat grinder. Itās not content to tinker with tax ratesāit seeks to raze civilization to its foundation. Family? Oppression. Faith? Delusion. Property? Theft. Identity? Fluid. The only thing fixed is your allegiance to the revolutionāand the jackboot waiting to stomp on your neck if you hesitate.
Marxism, socialism, and communism are not three flavors of the same dish. They are the stages of decomposition in a society infected with ideological gangrene. Marxism whispers in the ear, socialism tightens the noose, and communism kicks the chair. The only real difference is how long it takes the stench to become unbearable.
Socialism is the sugar-coated cyanideāpromising utopia and delivering ration books. It seduces the masses with promises of equality, then devours them in the machinery of state planning and enforced mediocrity. It flatters the poor as moral sages while using them like sandbags in a flood of political control. And when the checks bounce and the food disappears, all thatās left is a broken populace begging for the very chains they once cheered.
And then, communism arrives. Not with a whisper, but with a rifle. It strips away the euphemisms and gets down to business. Churches become kindling. Speech becomes contraband. Thought becomes treason. The individual vanishes into the mass, and the mass is managed by a self-appointed priesthood of sociopaths with state pensions. Itās not a government. Itās a cartel with a flag.
Marxism must brutalize to survive. A man made in Godās image will not voluntarily become an anonymous gear in someone elseās machine. He has to be crushedāspiritually, emotionally, intellectuallyāuntil all thatās left is the twitching echo of a soul, muttering slogans he doesnāt understand, in a language he didnāt choose.
But Marxism is clever. It knows that storming the palace doesnāt work anymore. The revolution wears makeup now. It holds TED Talks and writes HR policy manuals. It marches under the banners of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusionāa corporate cult of secular salvation with pastel branding and quarterly reports. Donāt be fooled. DEI is not about harmonyāitās about hierarchy. Not merit, but metrics. Itās affirmative action for ideology.
They call it āequity,ā but itās revenge in drag. It doesnāt raise anyone upāit pushes everyone down to the same pit of managed despair. Equity never means equal opportunity. It means equal outcome by unequal force. Itās social leveling with a sledgehammer, and it doesnāt care how many careers, institutions, or lives get flattened along the way.
Critical Race Theory? Thatās just Marxism in a new costumeāsame poison, different label. It strips individuals of moral agency and replaces original sin with pigmentation. Youāre no longer a sinner in need of grace. Youāre an oppressor in need of penance. And not to God, mind you, but to The System. To the Theory. To the revolution. Redemption isnāt grantedāit’s rented, monthly, and only so long as you toe the party line.
And then there’s ESGāEnvironmental, Social, and Governanceāthe bureaucratic Inquisition of the corporate world. Want a loan? Better hang that rainbow flag in your lobby. Want investment? Better put pronouns on your email signature and buy carbon credits like indulgences. ESG isnāt about sustainability. Itās about submission. Itās capitalism held hostage by activist warlords armed with spreadsheets and a moral superiority complex.
This is all Marxism with better fonts. Same envy. Same totalitarian itch. Same foundational hatred of God, private property, and the individual soul. But now it comes with HR-approved language and a marketing department that can make gulags sound like retreats. It doesnāt storm the gatesāit buys them, audits them, and rebrands them as āSafe Spaces.ā
The lie at the heart of Marxismāthe lie it guards with a thousand slogans and a thousand lies moreāis that justice can exist apart from God. But justice severed from God isnāt justice at all. Itās vengeance. Itās wrath without righteousness. And Karl Marx knew it. Thatās why he didnāt aim to reform the worldāhe aimed to replace it. God must go. The church must fall. The family must crumble. The soul must be reprogrammed. And once the ground is cleared, the State moves in to play god with a clipboard and a firing squad.
And yet, astonishingly, inexcusably, shamefullyāthere are churches today who flirt with this ideology as if it were just a more compassionate version of the gospel. As if Marxism were charity with a PhD. As if you could stitch together Christ and class warfare without crucifying both.
But the gospel is not āfrom each according to his ability, to each according to his need.ā The gospel is Christ crucifiedābloody, exclusive, divisive, and unapologetically personal. It doesnāt ask for your voteāit demands your soul. It doesnāt redistribute wealthāit redeems sinners. It doesnāt feed resentmentāit kills it.
And thatās the real reason Marxism despises Christianity. Because it cannot coexist with a God who commands loyalty higher than the State, who grants worth apart from identity groups, and who defines justice without input from activist coalitions. A God who forgives sins, not systems. A God who separates sheep from goats, not workers from owners.
Lenin knew it. Mao enforced it. Pol Pot reveled in it. Every Marxist utopia begins with a slogan and ends with a mass grave. And now, like a fool fumbling with a grenade and a blindfold, the modern West stumbles toward the same cliff, chanting the same songs, drunk on the illusion that this time will be different.
But it wonāt.
Because Marxism never changes. It only waits. It waits for nations to grow soft, for pulpits to grow silent, and for men to trade freedom for comfort and truth for slogans. And when the moment comes, it doesnāt march in with tanksāit creeps in with policies, pamphlets, and participation trophies.
There is no accord between the cross and the hammer and sickle. There is no āthird way.ā The Christian who tries to straddle both is not a bridgeāheās a Judas with a bumper sticker.
And if you could smile in Hell, Marx would be doing soānot because his ideas work, but because no one remembers how many millions died proving they donāt.