Sunday, February 21, 2016

On God: Chapter I

Just who the hell is “God,” anyway?

We pray, some of us—maybe not me, specifically, but that really isn't a big fucking deal at this point—our entire lives, multiple times per day, for something; and I'm not talking about the fucking jackasses that pray for hot pussy or luxurious mansions. No, I'm talking about the kind of fucking jackasses that pray for love. For togetherness. For someone they can faithfully trust, and who can faithfully trust them back. But, nine times out of ten, what does “God” give those people? Jack fucking shit. Instead, they're forced to live vicariously through their jackass high-school Facebook friends—you know, the kind you're only digital “friends” with because you happened to go to the same high school, where you (or, let's be honest, maybe they) were never treated as a friend but, instead, as a residing member of a lower class on some bullshit prepubescent-asshole-constructed social caste system?

Sorry, reliving high school there a little bit. I digress.

The point I am trying to make is that, despite what each of our beliefs may be, we are ultimately forced to forge our own destiny. Many will disagree, but really consider your life: what has your so-called “God” done, directly, that has produced a positive outcome with regard to your life specifically? They say “God works in mysterious ways.” It's a little too mysterious, if you ask me. Drugs have made me feel better than any sort of faith in a higher being I've ever had—and that's a common fucking feeling. According to your personal set of beliefs, please, explain that. Because if there is a god, he had to have created drugs—any of them, really—with probable intent for us to use, to consume, to indulge our fucking hearts out. But then people—you know which people—demand that this is simply a test, that “God” put these here simply for us to resist.

Well that's fucking bullshit.

The “God” I was always taught to believe in, as a child (somewhat forced) into the Lutheran (Christian Protestantism) faith, was a forgiving, understanding, and nonjudgmental god. So tell me: why the fuck did he set all of these god-damned (excuse the pun) traps for us, huh? I was never directly taught that God is a conniving bastard, but, honestly, through many of the “teachings” of the church... it kind of sounds like he might be. At least according to those vile beings—you know, the kind of people who greet you like a best friend within “the Lord's house” but who inwardly condemn you for some abstract fantasy of what could possibly construed in this fictional world of theirs something relatively, but not too close, to something like a sin. God forbid.

Here's the thing with me: if I'm going to believe in a god, it's going to be a god I agree with. I'm often asked, “What if you're wrong? What if you burn in hell for all eternity because you disagree with God?” My answer to that is very simple.

“If that is truly God's method—that, because It (that's right, It; since this theoretical God has no need to reproduce, It should have no gender, thereby eliminating the “He” standard that seems to come by default as the standard Christian's/Jew's/Muslim's pronoun for his/her higher being) and I have different social/political/cultural/ethical standpoints that I am destined to burn for eternity in Hell—then, frankly, I am happy to do so. That is no god of mine.

“A god that condemns the gays and tries to send shrimp-eaters to Hell? No, that is not my god. A god that condemns small, innocent children to death, whether through war or illness? That is not my god.”

Yet these things happen everyday. The massacres abroad; the massacres here at home. This “loving, caring, forgiving 'God'” not only allows but actually structures all of this? This is no god of mine.

That's why I believe in a different type of “God.” I believe in a god that resides spiritually throughout the entire Universe. Dark Matter? That's God. Dark Energy? That's God. Love? That's God. The random things that, while small, completely perk up your day? That's God. God is more an energy than a being. If it has a consciousness, it's one that we cannot understand—it's one that works on an entirely different mental plane than ours.

It is incredibly dangerous, I believe, to think of “God” as an old, wizened, white-bearded man living somewhere above the clouds. The Universe as we know it does not operate like that: why should we expect its creator to do so?
Let's face it, people: we are one of a kind. And, honestly, at this point, I wouldn't say the “good kind.” We're just kind of... here. We're doing great things technologically, sure, but, honestly, I'm not sure this “God” that you all believe in would give a shit. It's how we treat other that matters. And that is one of the few times you will ever see me agree with Christianity. Proper Christianity. Because let's face it, most of you fucking “Christians” do not fit the bill: you judgmental, condescending, absolutely counter-fucking-intuitive phonies.

I want to believe in a god. I want to believe in God. But I want to believe in a higher power that circulates as a force, without judgment, serving as justice, as the balance of good and bad, as the force that brings two complete strangers together in the best way possible. I want to believe in a higher power that circulates through the entire Universe, looking to provide and achieve only balance, justice, and love. I'm sure It would love my oxford comma. But I digress.

Basically, a Warning

It should be made clear that I in no way intend to insult anyone. This is simply a place I choose to express my views and hope, with any luck, to possibly connect with those who think similarly.