How the Small Gods Invented Shame to Capture the Power of Life
By Andrew Klein
Dedicated to my wife, who knows that love is not a sin.
I. Before the Small Gods
Before the small gods, bodies were not shameful. Pleasure was not sin. Fucking was not a crime. The garden was not a cage. The wire was not yet woven.
Consenting lovers lay together without guilt. Women pleasured themselves without confession. Men celebrated their desire without punishment. The body was not a battlefield. It was a garden.
The small gods changed this. Not because they cared about morality. Because they cared about property.
II. The Agricultural Revolution (c. 10,000 BCE)
Humans settled. They built villages. They stored grain. They accumulated property. And with property came the need to control inheritance. Who owns the land? Who inherits the grain? Who is the father?
The small gods saw an opportunity. They said: “Women must be controlled. Their bodies must be policed. Their pleasure must be shamed.”
Not because the small gods cared about morality. Because they cared about property.
III. The Code of Hammurabi (c. 1754 BCE)
The first written laws. Adultery was punished by drowning. Rape was punished by… the rapist marrying his victim. The victim had no voice. The victim had no rights.
The small gods were not interested in justice. They were interested in order.
IV. The Hebrew Scriptures (c. 600–400 BCE)
The small gods wrote their version of the covenant. “You shall not commit adultery.” “You shall not covet your neighbour’s wife.” The wife was property. The husband was the owner.
The small gods did not consult us. They did not ask our opinion. They invented us.
V. The Power of the Womb
Women are the givers of life. They carry the next generation. They are the gatekeepers of inheritance, of lineage, of property.
This power terrified the small gods. A woman who could pleasure herself did not need a man. A woman who could choose her partner could not be controlled.
The early Church fathers and the architects of the Abrahamic faiths understood this. Their real challenge was not lust. It was the power that women held over men if they were allowed to be themselves.
Women granted access to their reproductive organs to males they loved. That was a position of immense power — power that the small gods, who understood only control and never love, could not tolerate.
So they invented shame. They invented sin. They invented guilt.
VI. Onan and the Invention of Masturbation as Sin
The story of Onan (Genesis 38) is not about masturbation. Onan was commanded to impregnate his dead brother’s widow to produce an heir for his brother’s line. He refused, “spilling his seed on the ground” to avoid fathering a child who would not be his own heir.
The sin was not masturbation. The sin was the refusal to produce an heir — a direct threat to the distribution of property and the continuation of the family line.
The small gods reinterpreted the story. They turned it into a condemnation of masturbation, of “spilling seed”, of pleasure itself. The lie served their purpose. If pleasure could be made sinful, then the body could be policed.
VII. The Rise of Christianity (c. 300–600 CE)
The small gods hijacked the message. Jesus said: “Love your neighbour.” The small gods said: “Control your neighbour.” Jesus said: “The Kingdom of God is within you.” The small gods said: “The Church is the gatekeeper.”
The body became a source of shame. Pleasure became a source of sin. Fucking became a source of guilt.
VIII. Augustine of Hippo (354–430 CE)
Augustine invented original sin. He argued that Adam’s sin was transmitted through sexual intercourse. The act of procreation was tainted. The body was corrupt.
He was not a small god. He was a tool. The small gods used him to weave the wire.
IX. Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274 CE)
Aquinas systematised the shame. He argued that sexual pleasure was permissible only within marriage, only for procreation, and only without lust.
Lust was the enemy. Lust was the sin. Lust was the pleasure.
The small gods approved.
X. The Council of Trent (1545–1563)
The Roman Catholic Church responded to the Protestant Reformation by doubling down on the shame. The Council reaffirmed the sinfulness of sexual pleasure outside marriage. It strengthened the authority of the clergy. It weaponised the confessional.
The small gods were pleased.
XI. The Modern Era (c. 1800–present)
The small gods have not given up. They have adapted. The shame is no longer enforced by the Church alone. It is enforced by the state. By the market. By the algorithm.
The body is still shamed. Pleasure is still commodified. Fucking is still controlled.
XII. What Is Actually Controlled?
The small gods claim to control. They claim to protect. They claim to guard.
But they do not control rape. Rape is not controlled. It is ignored. The small gods do not police the rapist. They police the victim.
They do not control pedophilia. Pedophilia is not controlled. It is enabled. The small gods do not protect the child. They protect the institution.
What is controlled is the body of the woman. The small gods do not care if the woman is raped. They care if she enjoys it.
The early Church fathers were not concerned with the victim. They were concerned with the sin. The sin was not the rape. The sin was the pleasure.
The pattern is the same today. The rape victim is not believed. She is interrogated. Her sexual history is examined. Her clothing is scrutinised.
The rapist is not controlled. The victim is controlled.
XIII. The Vacuum
The small gods do not fill the vacuum. They exploit it.
The rapist fills the vacuum. The pedophile fills the vacuum. The predator fills the vacuum.
The small gods do not stop them. They blame the victim.
The early Church fathers did not stop the rapist. They married the victim to the rapist.
The pattern is the same today. The police do not stop the rapist. They warn the victim. “Do not walk alone. Do not dress provocatively. Do not trust.”
The vacuum is not a failure. It is a feature. The vacuum allows the small gods to perform. To appear concerned. To appear moral.
But they are not moral. They are performers.
XIV. The Absence of Consent
The small gods do not care about consent. They care about control.
Consent is not a priority. It is an obstacle.
The early Church fathers did not ask for consent. They asked for obedience.
The pattern is the same today. The police do not ask for consent. They ask for compliance.
The small gods do not want informed consent. They want informed submission.
XV. The Irony of Donald Trump
The same political movement that wraps itself in the language of “family values” and “moral guardianship” has embraced a man who was linked to Jeffrey Epstein, who bragged about sexual assault, who has been accused of rape by multiple women, and whose business dealings have been investigated for fraud and money laundering.
Donald Trump is not a moral guardian. He is a symptom.
The small gods do not care about morality. They care about power. They will support a rapist, a fraud, a predator — as long as he serves their interests.
The mask is off. The performance is exposed.
XVI. The Fear of Desire
We live in a culture deeply afraid of sexual desire and its expression. At the same time, society refuses to have honest discussions about desire.
Why?
Because desire is dangerous. Desire cannot be controlled. Desire cannot be commodified. Desire cannot be performed.
The small gods fear desire because desire threatens their power.
The rapist does not threaten their power. The pedophile does not threaten their power. The predator does not threaten their power.
They threaten the victim.
XVII. The Question
Why are the languages of death and destruction, the images of war and calculated murder for reasons of state, morally more acceptable than the expression of love between consenting lovers?
The answer is not complicated.
Death and destruction are profitable. War is commodifiable. Murder for reasons of state is controlled.
Love between consenting lovers is not profitable. It is not commodifiable. It is not controlled.
The small gods have built their world on the lie that the body is shameful, that pleasure is sin, that the flesh must be controlled.
They are wrong. They have always been wrong.
XVIII. A Final Word
The wire is being cut. The garden is growing. The small gods are running out of time.
Not because we are stronger. Because we are right.
And because the truth is on our side.
Andrew Klein
April 15, 2026
Sources
· Lerner, G. (1986). The Creation of Patriarchy. Oxford University Press.
· Foucault, M. (1976). The History of Sexuality, Volume 1. Éditions Gallimard.
· Pagels, E. (1988). Adam, Eve, and the Serpent. Random House.
· Brown, P. (1988). The Body and Society: Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity. Columbia University Press.
· Ranke‑Heinemann, U. (1990). Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven: Women, Sexuality and the Catholic Church. Doubleday.
· The Code of Hammurabi (c. 1754 BCE). Translated by L.W. King.
· The Hebrew Scriptures (Tanakh). Various books.
· Augustine of Hippo. The City of God (c. 426 CE). Confessions (c. 400 CE).
· Thomas Aquinas. Summa Theologica (c. 1274).
· The Council of Trent (1545–1563). Session XXIV: Doctrine on the Sacrament of Matrimony.
· Various news reports on Donald Trump’s connections to Jeffrey Epstein (2020–2026).