God, who is God? Is He someone? Something? Everything? Or maybe… nothing?

The description of God almost always varies, but all religions and philosophies end up converging on a solid root: God is responsible for our creation, for the creation of the universe, of space, time, matter, antimatter, reality, and literally everything that exists.
Some believe He came down to Earth and that His actions, along with ours, intertwine.
Others think He created us and left forever.
Others think He created us but only observes us.
And others think He observes us because we observe Him, and that He exists because we do… what?

Personally, I lean toward that last description, and it sounds complicated at first, but it’s actually very easy to understand.
From this perspective, God is not limited to a separate entity with emotions, a body, and rational actions.
God doesn’t “think” for Himself, but rather “thinks” for everyone and everything.
This kind of God is total — He’s everywhere, knows everything, experiences everything at once, and controls everything.
He can do all of that because He is everything.
It means that by being everything, God is literally creation itself.
The entire universe — with its history, space, dimensions, and layers of cosmic complexity — is God.

That would explain the apparent perfection of all existing systems and cycles.
Everything works because we form part of a “meta-entity” that constantly transforms and modulates itself in order to keep “living.”
Just as our bodies are an impressive and optimized machine, the entire universe is as well.

This doesn’t mean that… because someone created Him, and be… we know… hujol apjord… for eve…

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