![]() ![]() ![]() Julius Evola, Revolt Against The Modern World, 287 Even in its attenuated and Romanized Catholic version, the Christian faith represented an obstacle that deprived Western man of the possibility of integrating his authentic and irrepressible way of being through a concept and in a relationship with the Sacred that was most congenial to him. Thus, the outcome was some sort of hybridism. ![]() In theory, the Western world accepted Christianity but for all practical purposes it remained pagan the fact that Europe was able to incorporate so many motifs that were connected with the Jewish and Levantine view of life has always been a source of surprise among historians. For all practical purposes, Christianity “converted” Western man only superficially it constituted his “faith” in the most abstract sense while his real life continued to obey the more or less material forms of the opposite tradition of action, and later on, during the Middle Ages, an ethos that was essentially shaped by the Northern-Aryan spirit. ![]()
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