Opinion ‘Star Wars’ Character Ahsoka Tano Helped Me Process Leaving Evangelical Christianity

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‘Star Wars’ Character Ahsoka Tano Helped Me Process Leaving Evangelical Christianity​

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I didn’t leave evangelical Christianity with a guns-blazing conviction. Instead, I had a lot of grief and a years-long journey to reclaim what I had lost.

My relationship with my faith was very serious during high school and college. I spent nearly every evening and weekend on church activities. I enjoyed the shared sense of purpose that came with being in a group of people devoted to serving God and each other, who I could depend on and who depended on me. We would go on mission trips, start bible studies and prayer groups, fast together, and constantly talk about how to make Christ known through our words and actions.

It wasn’t until I moved to Japan and had a physical distance from the church that I started questioning some of the basic assumptions I had made and been taught about life. I remember feeling at war with myself as I outgrew my previous worldview — not because I chose to, but because I could not fit my experiences within the context of my religion. I met many people hurt by the church and saw too many examples of how what was taught did not match what was practiced.

I am not alone. More and more people choose to leave their religious backgrounds behind, but not necessarily their spirituality. Surprisingly, the closest reflection of my journey is in “Star Wars,” especially through the character Ahsoka Tano.

Ahsoka — who first appeared in Dave Filoni’s film “Star Wars: The Clone Wars” — has been speculated as a guest star in Season 3 of “The Mandalorian,” and she’s starring in her Disney+ spinoff “Ahsoka.” However, she is more than just the first BIPOC woman to lead a “Star Wars” series, with Rosario Dawson in the role. She also represents me and others who have a complicated faith.

In Season 5 of the animated series “Star Wars: The Clone Wars,” Ahsoka is accused of bombing the Jedi temple. Despite Anakin Skywalker’s unwavering faith that his Padawan is innocent, the Jedi Council is determined to find her, excommunicate her from the Jedi Order, and ultimately leave her fate up to an external war tribunal.

When she is proven innocent, the Jedi invite her back in, with the caveat that “this was actually [her] great trial” to make her a “greater Jedi.” But, seeing the hypocrisy of the Jedi Order, realizing how she has become complicit in a war that is causing more harm than good, and knowing she needs to find her own way, she rejects their invitation and walks away from her religion, her found family and her way of life.

“I am no Jedi,” Ahsoka Tano said during her duel with Darth Vader in “Star Wars Rebels.” She’s neither Sith nor Jedi, but Ahsoka’s connection with the force is undeniable.

When my world outgrew my worldview, I, like Ahsoka, had to figure out who I was outside my religion. So I let myself seek answers to life’s biggest questions. I didn’t denounce Christ — just as Ahsoka did not reject the force — but it did mean I needed to question the institution and belief system to decide my perspectives.

Watching Ahsoka walk away from the Jedi temple brought tears to my eyes. I felt like I could see myself on the screen. Her journey helped me to process my departure from my religious traditions. I got the chance to validate my choice to maintain certain parts of my faith.

I watched that scene again and again on my laptop as I huddled next to a space heater on my tatami floor in rural Japan. Coming from sunny Southern California, the cold was a shock. And my new quiet life without the constant company of my church community overwhelmed me. And on that tatami floor, I realized I could not participate in church as I had in college.

Based on what I was taught, I had said and done things against the very values Christians are meant to uphold. I no longer wanted to be part of organizations that perpetuated judgment, homophobia, hypocrisy and discouragement of critical thought.
The limitations of the Jedi Order are the limitations of many religious organizations, but I can only speak for mine. A religion that prizes and prioritizes tradition over context, individuality and the complexity of free will eventually loses relevance.

The “light-side” of the force, which the Jedi Order claimed to be, was not an unambiguous force for good. Even in the original Star Wars trilogy, Luke is urged by his Jedi Master to let go of his attachments when his friends are in danger to complete his Jedi training. He rejects this, however, and leaves to rescue Han and Leia.

In “The Mandalorian,” Din Djarin removes his mask twice in front of another person — despite rules preaching against the act — for the good of the child he loves.

Between the events of “The Clone Wars” and “Rebels,” Ahsoka builds a new lightsaber that is neither blue nor green nor red; her new lightsaber is white. Ahsoka rejected the light-side, dark-side dichotomy but continued her commitment to fighting for justice as a rebel against the empire.

These Star Wars moments gave me the courage to walk away from the parts of religion that do not serve me while freeing me to own still the parts that do.

I don’t know what is in store for Ahsoka’s faith journey as her story continues on Disney+. And I don’t know what’s in store for me either.

But I am committed to seeing others — not with the right and wrong dichotomies — but with the complexity they deserve. Thankfully, I’ve found a way to do that through my faith in Christ and not without it.
 
There's something to be said about the trappings of religion. But I see religion itself as a further expression of your faith and conviction. Your belief in the Lord is what matters most, but the works you perform within religion help further your faith, and the faith of others. To only ever focus on "spirituality" guts that faith, making it hollow and useless.
 
I can only react to this soyboygirl in the form of AI-voiced copypasta.



View attachment 4706344
If you have a hapa son it will turn into elliot rodger, if you have a hapa daughter it will turn into whatever kind of soy bugwoman this is. And yes I know it's a hapa because otherwise she would not have a christian religious upbringing if it weren't for her incel anglo christian dad who knocked up a white fetishist asian woman.
 
I want to shit on this woman but other than the retarded pop culture bullshit and the shit about how Christianity isn't LGBTQI+ positive, I somewhat agree with her. A lot of modern Christians seem to be no better than their secular counterparts and I find they really don't know their faith that deeply. They kinda just repeat what they are told. That being said, I will mock this woman for coming to this conclusion via fucking Star Wars. Read a book nigga.
What's unfortunate is there are a few movements to revive or keep the more strict "christian" teachings taken from one of the Great Revivals when it comes to behavior such as the "christ is king" groypers. The US is still dealing with the fallout from the Great Revivals with parts of generations having mental health issues from strict religious parenting. There's also the topic of circumcision being a new christian phenomenon in the US.
 
Luke, did I ever tell you about Ahsoka Tano? She was your father’s exotic teenage alien apprentice, a fine piece of jailbait from a more civilized age. She had the tightest body and the perkiest little breasts in the galaxy; barely legal in most systems.

Anakin and I used to doubleteam her at the end of every successful campaign during the Clone Wars, and once in a while we’d even have the entire 501st run a train over her, part of official Jedi “training” of course. In time, she learned how to handle a meatsaber better than anyone in the Jedi Temple. She wore a miniskirt every day so we told her there were no panties in space, and since she was constantly doing acrobatics you’d get a glimpse of her orange pussy mid fight as she’d do a flip while slicing a B2 Super Battledroid in half. It was surreal.

We taught her to grip her weapon backwards like a dildo and she constantly got captured by pirates and slavers almost every other day. It was ridiculous, like a constant porno Luke, you have no idea. And she was a good friend.
 
Usually these things are "How [Catholic|Orthodox] Theologian Helped Me Leave Evangelical Christianity," and it's about someone falling in love with Mary. Falling in love with a Jedi tentacle monster waifu is a new one. But it does suggest the writer is assimilating well to the Japanese culture.

However, she is more than just the first BIPOC woman to lead a “Star Wars” series, with Rosario Dawson in the role.
I don't know if you'd call her a lead, but Cree Summer was in the main ensemble of Ewoks in 1985. She's the furry with the pink hood:
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I guess the statement is technically true, but it's irrelevant as always.
 
and she was a good friend

Asoka Tahno... helped you get out of your religion. Faith vs something made by a board of directors.

I swear consoomers are a different breed of person.

Here's is how the rest of the internet sees that orange alien. Narrated by Obi-Wan. [AI voice btw]

Obiwan talks about Asoka.mp3

Luke, did I ever tell you about Ahsoka Tano? She was your father’s exotic teenage alien apprentice, a fine piece of jailbait from a more civilized age. She had the tightest body and the perkiest little breasts in the galaxy; barely legal in most systems.

Anakin and I used to doubleteam her at the end of every successful campaign during the Clone Wars, and once in a while we’d even have the entire 501st run a train over her, part of official Jedi “training” of course. In time, she learned how to handle a meatsaber better than anyone in the Jedi Temple. She wore a miniskirt every day so we told her there were no panties in space, and since she was constantly doing acrobatics you’d get a glimpse of her orange pussy mid fight as she’d do a flip while slicing a B2 Super Battledroid in half. It was surreal.

We taught her to grip her weapon backwards like a dildo and she constantly got captured by pirates and slavers almost every other day. It was ridiculous, like a constant porno Luke, you have no idea. And she was a good friend.
this dumb tv copypasta is the funniest shit to come out of star wars in decades
 
Watching Ahsoka walk away from the Jedi temple brought tears to my eyes. I felt like I could see myself on the screen.

I'm the same way, lady. I cry with relieved recognition every time Anakin ignites his lightsaber to off those filthy sand "people".
 
However, she is more than just the first BIPOC woman to lead a “Star Wars” series, with Rosario Dawson in the role.
Rosario was a decent Ahsoka but this autism is why I hate the casting for her ultimately. Ahsoka was originally voiced by a blonde white chick yet people act like just because she has a "bipoc" woman casted as her now the retards act like Ahsoka has always been some ooga booga street nigger.

She was never white or black, in fact ironic that that an asian woman is ignoring the fact the Togruta race has inspirational off of asian cultures(of course she would ignore that, she isn't a real Star Wars fan, she is just a fan of goyslop Star Wars and ignores the point of actual SW things she watches like Clone Wars). But even with that detail Ahsoka was never asian either. Ahsoka was an orange skin alien, even if an alien has similarities to humans that doesn't mean every single aspect of them is related to some real breed of human, it is very small thinking that you must try to play "guess the race" for an alien or another fictional species like the orcs in Lord of the Rings, or goblins in Harry Potter. Female cosplayers now get harassed for wearing blackface for cosplaying Ahsoka now, it is so stupid.
 
You know, there was a time where I was less willing to believe in the Anita Sarkeesian comment about how the media influences you; and not because I'm a big brain who's too smart for propaganda, but because as much as I liked fiction and how cool it'd be if it was real, I was very aware that I was stuck in the boring reality where the force, magic, materia, etc isn't real. Sure as a kid, there were times I tried really hard to use the force or telekinesis, and while the desire remained, I knew it wasn't possible or even probable. There is nothing wrong with receiving inspiration from characters in stories, strength of character, overcoming impossible odds, etc etc; but what you draw from them should be rooted in reality, not fart huffing that'd make 8 year old me cringe.
 
I don't blame them. Evangelical Christians have to be the worst. With all the Israel and Kike worship. Plus, all the stupid shit they tend to believe and say. I think Evangelical Christianity is the one that produces all the YEC tards.
 
A certain verse came to my mind when reading this story:
"His winnowing shovel is in His hand, and He will clear His threshing floor and gather His wheat into the barn. But the chaff He will burn up with fire that never goes out.”
Matthew 3:12
Also, something something Parable of The Sower.
 
"Watching Ahsoka walk away from the Jedi temple brought tears to my eyes."

"I don’t know what is in store for Ahsoka’s faith journey as her story continues on Disney+."

The line between paid shill and genuine retard no longer exists.
 
"I felt like the church wasn't practicing what it preached and wanted a closer connection to God."
Alright, so far so good.
"I realized this because of Ahsoka Tano."
Huh.
"BIPOC"
Delusional, especially with the justification that what the church wasn't practicing correctly was saying being gay is a sin. If only any of these Christians faltering because of muh gays took a second to see that the LGBTW/E movement is fanatically opposed to Christianity and seeks to corrupt and destroy it at every opportunity, along with many other things. Maybe there's a reason that homosexuality is called a sin.
 
What's unfortunate is there are a few movements to revive or keep the more strict "christian" teachings taken from one of the Great Revivals when it comes to behavior such as the "christ is king" groypers. The US is still dealing with the fallout from the Great Revivals with parts of generations having mental health issues from strict religious parenting. There's also the topic of circumcision being a new christian phenomenon in the US.
America just has an unhealthy attitude towards religion and I think it's never going to be examined in depth because it has metasiticized into every part of American culture in the worst way possible. I do not think Christianity is a bad religion at all but the way it is practiced in America is neurotic and just something we need to evaluate and reform from the inside. I don't think the US is the great Satan but it is a country with many unhealthy and outright bad attitudes towards various aspects of culture and we've let it go too far for awhile.
 
I do not think Christianity is a bad religion at all but the way it is practiced in America is neurotic.
Very few Americans practice Christianity. Not enough to be a cultural force. It's simply a label used by the "spiritual but not religious" types because claiming a tradition adds a veneer of respectability to moral therapeutic deism.

This is from a documentary (I think) shot in England, but it reflects the state of American religious practice fairly well. This sort of minister is not common in either country, they are the exception to the rule:
 
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