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 The point I was trying to make with the economics analogy is that rejecting Christianity because all one knows of it comes from modernists is like rejecting all economics because all one knows of it comes from Keynesians. In both disciplines, there is a faithful remnant, and it's to them you should turn for what is truly taught--no to those who have explicitly rejected its core teachings. Like Mencken did. 
 Keynesians like modernists aren't all wrong, they're just retarded/handicapped for excluding vast parts of the cumulative sum of knowledge in their respective fields for the most recent bits.

It would be like quantum physicists rejecting Einsteins (provable) theory of relativity that came prior, rather than trying to unify the two ideologies, as they've spent the late 20th century to the present working towards