The Christian Cancer of Humanity

A fresh, bold approach at leaving a rigged system of faith.

$9.99

The Christian Cancer is not a memoir, not a faith crisis, and not an angry rant.
It is a clinical, philosophical critique of Christianity as a system—how it formed, how it spread, and why its effects remain hazardous when left exempt from scrutiny.

This book treats Christianity the way skeptics treat every other powerful institution: as something that must justify its continued influence.

No reverence.
No outrage.
Just analysis.


This Book Is for You If You:

  • Are skeptical by nature and tired of faith being treated as untouchable

  • Have outgrown religious explanations but want intellectual rigor, not mockery

  • Sense that Christianity’s harms are structural, not accidental

  • Are interested in psychology, power dynamics, and systems that persist by conditioning obedience

  • Want language for doubts you’ve already had—but never fully articulated


This Book Is Not for You If You:

  • Need belief systems handled gently

  • Confuse criticism with persecution

  • Want reassurance instead of evaluation

  • Believe longevity equals legitimacy

This book does not comfort.
It clarifies.


Inside You’ll Find:

  • A modern legal and psychological reframing of Jesus

  • Christianity analyzed as a self-replicating behavioral system

  • Guilt, suffering, and obedience examined as features—not flaws

  • A philosophical case for why Christianity resists scrutiny

  • An argument for why ideological immunity is more dangerous than disbelief

Each section builds toward one conclusion: Christianity persists not because it heals, but because it discourages full evaluation.


What to Expect

This book won’t tell you what to believe.
It will make certain beliefs difficult to maintain without examination.

If you’re comfortable questioning power, tradition, and inherited narratives, this book was written for you.

The Christian Cancer asks a simple question most institutions avoid:

If this system were introduced today, would we allow it to operate unchecked?

If that question makes you pause— you already understand why this book exists.