All i was doing was comparing the shaping of stories--ie when you look at how star wars began and how it ended up its amazing how far it came, the same way when you look at Christianity way back in its first years ie 100 CE and compare it to what it ended up as today you can see that it was changed quite a bit from its original inception by absorbing different mythologies and sociological influences from culture, especially the melting-pot Roman social culture from which it arose, which is historical fact. This is not anything unique to Christianity--in fact one of the more well-known instances of this process is in the Jewish faith where the merging of the original Jewish culture with Babylonian culture during their captivity gave birth to what eventually became the template for the modern Jewish faith. As Joseph Campbell once said, Mythology is religion and religion is mythology, and they are built and shaped in the same way because they are essentially the same thing, only one has been given a political context and one has remained as a storytelling device--which is why it was easy and natural for Star Wars to actually become a proper faith, even though it wasn't intended to be such as thing. I was just drawing a comparison to how a mythology is shaped-- i chose christianity because most readers are christian but it could be applied to any faith, as i mentioned. If you are ready to throw a book in the trash for one trifling passing reference that implies Christianity to be on equal ground with all the other religions/mythologies then you need to seriously get out more.