>>510879607 (OP)As esoteric as this artists imagery is, it is an honest reaction to the openly declared subservience of the christian sects to the jewish sect. If your own leaders declare your faith, race, freedoms or nation explicitly secondary to those of another, the people will absolutely lose their trust and indeed you will probably end up shattering their entire worldview.
It's not possible for a church or state to retain its authority or respect when it not only bows but abases itself before another. People can end up rejecting religion altogether or seeking meaning in older or alternative forms. That said rather than paganism, I think movement away from overtly dispensationalized churches towards orthodox or at least not nakedly politically subservient churches is more likely.
We saw something a little like this with sports teams a few years back when players started kneeling before flags or I think other teams in some cases.
Ishida is a doubly interesting case since he's ethnically Japanese. His choice of old Norse religious imagery to represent the "corrupted" temple is also fascinating to me, since this is only the germanic / anglo-saxon antecedent religion. Perhaps this was a deliberate choice to speak to the majority german/anglo-saxon ethnic groups in the US. Or is this just from his conception of antecendant religion since he grew up in that previously dominant culture.
The latter possibility is more interesting because of the "intersectional" effects of the subservience of Christian religions and white european nations to the new Israeli empire.
If you are a christianized Latino or Filipino or African, living under an externally imposed and interconnected foreign religion/culture, English, French, Spanish, "Gringo" whatever, and then that culture abases itself before a new master, what exactly happens to you? Meet the new boss? Find a new job? Become your own boss? There are tertiary cultural effects here I don't think anyone has started to consider.