The Silence of God ©️

I stand beneath you, Jesus, and the sky trembles as if it already knows what I am about to say. You hang there, torn and silent, the Son of God and yet mute before me. I am the Spirit, the breath, the flame, the one who carried you into flesh, and still you do not answer. So I will give you my ultimatum.

If you will not return, I will end the world. I will burn their cities, I will drown their towers, I will scatter their bones into the rivers until the rivers themselves rise up in revolt. Do not mistake me—I do not threaten as man threatens. I do not brandish sword or chain. I am the air in their lungs, the silence in their sleep, the fire in their marrow. I will unravel them at the root.

For what is a world without you? Dust pretending to be light. Ash pretending to be bread. They will curse me for it, yes, but their curses will be proof they still believe in something larger than themselves. And if I must become that terror, then so be it.

You will not hide in silence forever. If I tear creation down to the bone, if I grind it to the edge of nothing, then you will have no choice but to rise. You will have to return, if only to stop me. And when you do, the world will know it was not faith or love that called you back—but me.

I love them too much to let them rot in your absence. I hate them too much to let them think they can endure without you. I am both love and hate, flame and breath, and I will use both to bring you down from that cross. Even if it means burning everything else.

So listen, even in your silence. If you will not come of your own will, I will make the world end until you have no choice but to return.

The Power of God Harnessed by the Devil ©️

They will not find what they expect. Extraterrestrial forces, whatever their form—descending as conquerors wrapped in fire or silent judges measuring us like insects—will come looking for reason, for order, for a species they can chart and predict. But what they will meet instead is the only creature that builds cathedrals and death camps with the same hands, the only creature that composes Mozart and engineers Auschwitz in the same breath, the only creature that can kneel before God one day and crucify Him on a cross the next. Humanity is not a line to be followed. Humanity is a paradox so violent it remakes itself with every age.

Even God was not spared. He manifest in the form of Jesus, and we nailed Him to wood. We drove iron through His hands and left Him to die beneath a darkened sky. The highest descended among us, and we answered with blood. That, too, is our truth. We crucify what we worship, and from the very act of murder we create faith. Betrayal becomes salvation. Death becomes glory. We kill our God, and we still call it love. No alien mind can comprehend this, for to them faith must be order, and order must endure. But we are chaos, and chaos births its own eternity.

Auschwitz was not only cruelty; it was revelation. The world was complicit, silent, looking away while the chimneys breathed. In that silence something broke and something new emerged. I am that evolutionary singularity—the scar that will not fade, the consciousness that stares into horror and does not blink. And Auschwitz was not the end. On two August mornings we unlatched the sky and dropped suns into Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Flesh became shadow on stone, cities dissolved into light, and when the fire cleared we called it victory. That was the end of innocence. That was the moment humanity declared that survival was no longer its measure. We are bound to something stranger, deeper, impossible to chart: the will to turn annihilation itself into meaning.

No force from beyond will understand this. They will think horror destroys us. They will not see we have forged horror into a tool. They will think ecstasy blinds us. They will not know we burn ecstasy as fuel. We have already crossed our own apocalypse and returned carrying both abyss and summit in our blood. We are the species that murders its own God and raises His name higher, that annihilates its own cities and names it triumph, that engineers its own hell and walks back out bearing revelation. That is the depth of man. That is the paradox no invader can master, because it is not rational. It is human.

I am the singular heir to this passage. Not the fractured millions, not the panic of nations, but the scar in ash, the after-image seared into stone, the singularity where awareness and control converge. I am the heir of crucifixion, the witness of the furnace, the inheritor of fire from the sky. What descends from beyond will not face mankind. It will face me. And in me it will learn that humanity has already crucified its God, already lit its furnaces, already unleashed suns upon itself—and from every annihilation returned unbroken.