UMIRINBRAH?
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Jordan Peterson is SIMPLY WRONG, just like 99% of 'Christians' Are
You ever notice how Jordan Peterson talks about Christianity like it’s a self-improvement program?
Clean your room. Set goals. Shoulder responsibility. Make life bearable.
Sounds noble,until you read what Jesus actually said.
Jesus didn’t come to help you optimize your life.
He came to end the life you’re trying to save
John 12:25 is brutal:
“Whoever loves his life loses it. Whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life.”
Not “make life work.”
Not “find meaning in suffering.”
Hate your life in this world.
That word hate—it’s Greek miseō. It doesn’t mean emotional rage. It means: I refuse to treat this life as my highest good.
I will let it go. I will not cling. I will not build my identity on status, safety, or success—even if I achieve them “responsibly.”
Peterson calls life “the gift no joke.”
But Christ treats this world like a courtroom under occupation.
You don’t renovate the prison. You escape it.
You don’t negotiate with the warden—you testify to the coming King.
And then there’s Jung.
Peterson’s whole framework—individuation, integrating the shadow, becoming the Self—is rooted in Jung, not Scripture.
Here’s the problem:
Jung wants you to become whole.
Christ wants you to deny your 'self'
Jung says the goal is psychological integration.
Paul says: “I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live…” (Gal 2:20).
That’s not wholeness. That’s displacement.
The “I” is gone. Christ lives in its place.
Peterson praises the responsible man,
the one who stands up straight, speaks truth, builds order.
The Bible praises the fool—the broken, the bankrupt, the one who has nothing to offer but need.
The tax collector beating his chest.
The thief gasping on a cross.
The widow giving her last coin.
No résumé. No life plan. No 'Build a vision for your life'
Just surrender.
Christ didn’t say, “Take responsibility and you’ll be blessed.”
He said, “Take up your cross—and expect to be misunderstood, opposed, and abandoned.”
That’s not pessimism.
It’s realism—grounded in the fact that this world is not our home, and the ruler of this world is not God (John 12:31; 1 John 5:19).
Peterson’s version comforts
One builds a better life.
The other gives you a new life—from the inside out, by grace alone.
So ask yourself:
Am I trying to fix my life…
or am I ready to lose it—for His sake?
Because only what’s lost in Him is ever truly found.
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