>...And when Adam and Ever were cast out of the Garden, He created a second man, to rule and watch over them as befitting their punishment. So was made the first King
>Thus when Adam dug and Eve spun, the nobleman was there
>And the nobleman did exercise the right of all lords, and took for himself Eve on the first night, and so was born of them the first prince
This text is found in all three of the Abrahamic faiths. How does this change how society develops?
Not much, really. Even without that, large parts of the Bible already are propaganda in favour of the Abrahamitic kings.
>>47252183
Is this just a cuck joke
>>47252230
But most of the kings, even those once regarded as champions of god, end up fucking up and dead in a ditch
>>47252230
Surely having it explicitly in black and white would at least delay the fall of Kings or maintain their power for a lot longer than in our timeline?
>>47252254
They had cuck jokes since Gilgamesh
>>47252183
>How does this change how society develops?
Italian republics never develop, republicanism in general never becomes a thing, absolutism or even totalitarianism becomes the norm.
>>47252348
Those mostly argued their status with their ancient, pre-christian roots though.
>>47252330
The oldest joke we got is about women farting during sex.
>>47252273
>>47252280
Nobility of birth held on for most of human history.
>>47252183
>the nobleman did exercise the right of all lords, and took for himself Eve on the first night
Historically, this was never a thing in europe.
>>47252459
>Those mostly argued their status with their ancient, pre-christian roots though.
But they were never specifically anti-Christian though. They would be if OPs statement were Biblical.
>>47252183
But doesn't that technically goes against the teachings of all the Abrahamic religions. A man is not allowed to mingle with another man's wife. Otherwise it counts as adultery. Hell in Muslim culture, such a thing gets your penis cut off I believe.
>>47252280
Revolutions tend to be as anti-clerical as anti-monarchial. I don't think things would turn out too different to what we already got in the French and Russian revolutions.