All systems are corrupt to some extent and that certainly includes social and government and religious systems. A system should not be an ongoing concern. It should be purpose Driven and once that purpose has been substantially fulfilled, the system should refactor as it said in programming not as an ongoing concern. Now I noticed I didn't say evolve cuz that's what systems do good systems. Do they keep going? But when you look at the roots of systems that should not be the case. However, there's a redemptive quality because once the system has sustained itself, how does it use that power and authority for good for some kind of human benefit, not for its own self perpetuation but for human benefit, that is the test and I am thinking about this realizing that the foundations of what became the Catholic Church were fundamentally based on one man, the gospel writer, Matthews, biased or interpretation. There were many gospel writers and that very one, and in fact, only one passage or two passages in the entire Christian Bible are the bases for the vast institution. That at one point at least was incredibly self-serving and corrupt still is to a large extent, but the deceased Pope Francis ostensibly wanted to do good for the poor and yet what actually came of his tenure or the current popes focus the new pope Leos focus what will become of his tenure other than perpetuating that very institution and getting caught up in its bureaucracy? Not to help humanity but to help itself