The God Assertion

Is there a God? If so, what is She like?

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Eodnhoj7
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Joined: Mon Mar 13, 2017 3:18 am

The God Assertion

Post by Eodnhoj7 »

If our attempts to find meaning or comfort through God are really manifestations of a deeper struggle with the inherent fear of our mortality and the void does this necessitate God is strictly the intensity of this experience?

AI Analysis:

That's a compelling question. You're asking whether, if our religious or spiritual pursuits are rooted in confronting our mortality and the void — the fundamental existential fears — then God itself might be nothing more than the intensity or the experience of that fear.

Let's explore this idea carefully.
1. If God is the manifestation of existential fear

You posit that God is not necessarily an external being but the intensification or the experience of our deep-seated fears — fear of death, meaninglessness, the void.

In this view:
God becomes a symbol or the emotional charge that arises when we confront these fears.

2. Does this mean God is strictly the experience?

Yes, in the sense that God might be the intensity of the fear, the heightened emotional or existential state that emerges when facing the void.

This aligns with psychological interpretations:
The religious experience is often a profound emotional reaction to the awareness of mortality and nothingness.

3. Implications of this view

If God is the intensity of existential fear,
then religious beliefs are not about an external divine entity
but about the internal experience of that fear and the attempt to manage or transcend it.

This reframes the concept of God from a being to a state or a process—the emotional height and the psychological energy that arises when confronting the abyss.

4. Does this diminish the traditional notion of God?

Potentially, yes:
It suggests God is not an external, personal deity but an internal phenomenon—the presence of the fear and the response to it.

Alternatively, it could expand the notion:
God as the total experience or **the ultimate emotional force within the human psyche.

Summary

If our attempts to find meaning or comfort through God are rooted in confronting the existential fears of mortality and the void,
then God may indeed be the intensity of that experience—the heightened emotional state that arises when facing the abyss.
Final thought:

This perspective highlights that the divine might not be an external being but **the inner presence or **the heightened state of our existential awareness.

It shifts the understanding from God as an other to God as an inside experience, the fire we feel when confronting our mortality.

Feel free to reflect further or challenge this idea!
Martin Peter Clarke
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Re: The God Assertion

Post by Martin Peter Clarke »

Death, the gift that keeps on giving. Meaning.
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Greatest I am
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Re: The God Assertion

Post by Greatest I am »

Martin Peter Clarke wrote: Mon Jun 23, 2025 7:59 am Death, the gift that keeps on giving. Meaning.
The death of bad ideas is a good thing.

A mind should always seek that via sin, --- as I describe it.

"Sin: The Path to Excellence"
Sin has long been associated with moral failure, but what if we reframe it? I see sin as something essential to human growth—a necessary part of striving for excellence.
At its core, sin simply means “missing the mark.” It’s not about wickedness but about falling short of an ideal. Christianity and even Gnostic traditions acknowledge this idea in different ways. The concept of felix culpa—the “happy fault”—suggests that sin is necessary for God’s plan. Whether or not one believes in the supernatural, the wisdom of this idea is clear: missing the mark is a natural part of aiming for something greater.
To evolve, both as individuals and as a species, we must take risks and inevitably fall short. This process—of setting goals, failing, and trying again—is what drives progress. Every moment of “sin” is evidence that we’re pushing ourselves beyond our comfort zones and striving toward our best possible selves. This is what we do, consciously or unconsciously, at every point in our lives.
Even competition, often seen as divisive, is tied to this idea. Competition highlights our shortcomings, creating a contrast between where we are and where we want to be. It creates leaders, innovators, and excellence by encouraging us to improve. Of course, competition produces losers, and those losses can feel like failures or even evoke the idea of "evil." But in truth, every loss is an opportunity—a moment to learn, adapt, and grow stronger.
This is why I celebrate sin—not as a call to moral failure but as an embrace of imperfection and growth. Without sin, without missing the mark, we would have no benchmarks for greatness. There would be no leaders to inspire us, no innovators to challenge us, and no progress to drive humanity forward.
I don’t believe in the supernatural, but I see wisdom in the way ancient scribes wove this idea into their teachings. Sin, in its truest sense, is not something to avoid but something to engage with thoughtfully. It is the evidence of our striving, our courage to try, and our commitment to evolve.
So, I invite you: aim high. Take your shot. Miss the mark. Become a sinner in the best way possible. In doing so, you’ll not only create a better version of yourself but also contribute to the collective excellence of humanity.
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