God or Gods…
Goddess or Goddesses…
The subject of deity is a tricky one.
There are a plethora of possibilities when
it comes to the existential and the ethereal,
and as mankind constantly clings to discover
its humble beginnings, the seeking of a higher
power or deity always comes to mind and continuously
remains in play.
People cling to their beliefs and rightfully
so, but that makes it hard for different thoughts
on the subject to take root or to truly take
on some form that could garner any accreditation.
God is a mystery and it would seem and could
be argued that as a human species, we almost
prefer him, her, it as a mystery if solely
for it to benefit our own ideologies and reinforce
our own callings.
But the mystery of God is as much about our history and origin
as it is trying to find the answers
to who and what God is, and in finding those
answers, we could quite possibly need to look
to the sky and the stars and space…
If you were to really look at it – this
world and existence that we call life,
you would have to
come to the conclusion that something is amiss;
nature seems to live off itself, thrive with
the give and take, the cause and effect.
you can see how all other living species
somehow contributes to the overall environment
and ecosystem
The weak of the species either adapt and survive
or die and replenish the earth in a different
form or method.
When it comes to habitat, other species use
their surroundings and environment for their
immediate necessities…
Exempt from this are human beings.
Humans seem to be the only species on this
planet that does not give back, does not fully
contribute, but rather depletes.
The case could very well be made that a planet
that is built for reciprocity would naturally
birth or spawn living organisms that function
in very much the same capacity, especially
those that are supposed to be the most sentient.
However, humans do not.
if humanity is the only species that causes depletion
and that all other species use or
contribute to the ecosystem then just maybe,
the former is not originally a part of the
latter, but rather a planted organism, placed
within the confines of an environment that
is more suited to its needs than not.
Maybe humanity’s origin lies with something else
– Gods, maybe – but more likely scientists,
extraterrestrial scientists to be more exact,
intelligent life that decidedly used this
planet, Earth, as a grounds for genetic engineering
and whatever else that may be known,
detected, or speculated.
To entertain the idea that the human species
does not originate on earth is not a new thought.
Rather, it is steeped from the historical
chronicles of biblical stories, some Christian
and Judaic (and more).
The idea of visiting aliens delivering human beings,
depositing us in some form on this planet,
is not that foreign of an idea, nor is it
new-age.
In the Old Testament of the Christian Bible,
which is also part of the Judaic Torah,
Ezekiel is visited by a kind of ‘chariot’ and its description
by many scholars have led some the brightest
and best minds to at least accept the possibility
that what the writer of the ancient book experienced
was an alien visitation.
The construction of Stonehenge, the pyramids,
the tales of Atlantis and all the marvels
that exist in the world must practically stem
from something of substance, and based on
earlier writings of the ancients, it was common
for the so-called ‘sky-gods’ to visit
and thus the stories of old
that came to form the religious folklore that
was later tailored around doctrine and dogma.
What we are left with as human beings is the
same notions and ideas that we have always
had – that there’s something larger and
bigger at work that we derive from.
We're seeing more and more that human beings are not only
looking to the skies for the answers, but have also begun to bring those same stars, skies, space
down to the earth in an almost visible and palpable, tangible, exchange
of
understanding to give some sort of meaning to this thing call life.
