For God's Sake

"Yeah, these morals look interesting, let's see how people follow it in harmony."

Imagine that's what your "God" would've thought in the beginning. That line might sound like it came out of a casual banter—but beneath it lies a question we've all wrestled with at some point: How would that entity anchor people to a moral compass without forcing a specific belief down their throats?

It was quite simple - wrap morals in stories. Mythologies. Tales of gods, demons and redemption arcs. People relate to stories. And the one who tells the story often gets revered. Respected. Elevated. That’s how morals sneak into everyday life without preaching.

But here's where it gets interesting: individuals start building their own philosophies over time. They question & shape personal ideologies. It becomes less about “what was told” and more about “what I believe.” That’s individuality kicking in. And with individuality, comes divergence.

So now, we’ve got a bunch of humans walking around with entirely different spiritual GPSs, which of course sounds chaotic, laaa? But there’s an unspoken rule: Respect others’ beliefs. Not because a GOD told you to, but because it’s a HUMAN thing to do. But... do we actually do that?

Truth is, many of us wear religion like a badge of honor—or worse, a weapon of pride. We forgot that beliefs were meant for exploration. To ask questions. To grow. Not to divide. Not to start holy wars on social platforms or dinner tables.

Religion was never meant to be an identity; it’s a right. A deeply personal one. And spirituality? That’s a journey, not a scoreboard.

So next time you find yourself clenching fists over someone else's belief system—pause. Rethink. You’re not protecting God. You’re just protecting your version of that guy.

Embrace spirituality. For God's sake—literally.

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