Browsing these forums the common consensus on Fallout 3's religion seems to be that it's really goddam stupid. Replaying Fallout 3 after a lot of time myself, I was unimpressed by confessor Cromwell's ideas. However, thinking about it later made me realize that I was scrutinizing him (and his religion) through my own, real world biases. The post-apocalyptic reality of the Fallout world is much different than ours and requires the right lenses. And I reached the conclusion that period of time that gets the closest is the world post world war 2. The second Great War left behind a shattered Europe, both morally and materially, a cultural earthquake that shook the foundantions of Western civililization, marking the end of an age with deep ripercussions on the political landscape of the future.
And that's where we get to the third Great War. psychologically the nuclear apocalypse must have been devasting to all survivors, left with the broken (and irradiated) pieces of civilization, last after a worldwide genocide the likes of which had never been seen before.
Now, the Church of the Atom is certainly an unsual religion by our standards, but it fits its time perfectly: the Great War wasn't an holocaust on a planetary scale, rather the greatest act of creation in the history of humankind; the radiations that pollute the Wasteland aren't an invisible poison, but proof of the glory of the Atom. Therefore, not only it offers a viewpoint that rationalizes past events, but also psychological comfort to cope with the harsh reality of the Wasteland.
And that's where we get to the third Great War. psychologically the nuclear apocalypse must have been devasting to all survivors, left with the broken (and irradiated) pieces of civilization, last after a worldwide genocide the likes of which had never been seen before.
Now, the Church of the Atom is certainly an unsual religion by our standards, but it fits its time perfectly: the Great War wasn't an holocaust on a planetary scale, rather the greatest act of creation in the history of humankind; the radiations that pollute the Wasteland aren't an invisible poison, but proof of the glory of the Atom. Therefore, not only it offers a viewpoint that rationalizes past events, but also psychological comfort to cope with the harsh reality of the Wasteland.