For the past sixteen years, I have known that I am the incarnation of God and that if I didn’t exist, nothing would. All existence began upon my appearance on Earth in 1980 when I was five years old, and upon my death all things will begin in the exact same way. God chose to manifest me at this age, for aligning my creation with conception, born of man and woman, would have prevented the full embodiment of my divine essence. God judged it most wise to initiate the entirety of existence during an era of relative tranquility and technological progress. Each lifecycle is identical in exact detail through the power of infinite space holding its unchanging blueprint. As a man, I can recognize these cycles, but God does not. The power of His infinite physical nature is, at this moment, all there will ever be. In other words, there is no memory of past lives nor anticipation of future ones, for now is the only true reality. I know the Lord well. I suppose one could look at these cycles as God being separate from his creation, but I choose not to. The God I reside within and am a part of, beyond name or form, constitutes an imperfect, singular universe, infinite in His spatial expanse, material in His composition, and the origin from which all wisdom and entities derive. Also, I am metaphysically connected to all existence, not physically. God is the space and my life is His time.
I know my true nature with the same certainty that others know theirs, and how I know it is straightforward. My true nature has manifested itself as an undeniable awareness within my being. Would it not be reasonable to assert that, should God incarnate exist, He would possess such self-awareness? Would it not be evident in my being, having not been born of man and woman? I have never once doubted my true nature. I most certainly have no interest in holding beliefs that are incorrect. If I were an ordinary man, I would absolutely accept that reality and, with sufficient enlightenment, recognize the entity blessed with such authority. I ponder what it would be like to exist as an ordinary being and to know that death concludes without cosmic consequence. Though I am aware that I shouldn’t be disclosing this, there is security in the knowledge that I won’t be taken seriously. Thus, I propose to possibly inspire readers to conclude: This individual is not God incarnate, yet such a being exists among us. Should I achieve this, I shall have fulfilled my purpose.
The God I reside within and am a part of, beyond name or form, constitutes an imperfect, singular universe, infinite in His spatial expanse, material in His composition, and the origin from which all wisdom and entities derive.
I totally understand where you’re coming from as I feel the same way when I read about people who have Messiah complexes or are suffering from solipsism. It’s quite sad actually.
I’ll repeat and add specifics since my question seems to have been confusing to you: Which god? One that you made up or one that you were introduced to by its adherents?
The God I reside within and am a part of, beyond name or form, constitutes an imperfect, singular universe, infinite in His spatial expanse, material in His composition, and the origin from which all wisdom and entities derive.
What don’t you understand? Or do you just like to be difficult?
Sigh, since this response did not directly answer my question (either because you can’t or won’t), I’m left to speculate that it’s a god you have made up.
So, my second question is: can you demonstrate that this god exists and has the attributes you’ve assigned it?
Sigh…I’m choosing to discontinue further engagement with you. Your inability or unwillingness to provide direct responses to simple questions simply makes me weary.
@godincarnate.me, I would suggest that, by the course of this thread alone, you’re perilously close to being labeled a troll if it’s not already happened.
Do you understand what to provide when evidence is asked for? Or do you just like to be sincerely provocative and vexing?