by
god
(also spelt GOD)
Good day and or evening.
Glad you could make it.
Keep your chin up while I cut your throat.
I'll tell you what to say and where you can go
and what you can't do.
And if'n you don't believe in me the way
I say, then you're fair game for the plucking and the skinning.
Ah, godhead. What a pure wonder.
The dynamics of great pleasure god takes in creation,
and when does god take the form of human
and roam around, sampling life as
maybe an ugly, really old lady.
You ever think I might not decide to go to Vegas?
After all, I made it.
So if I want to go to Vegas, I will.
And you'd never know anyway.
Survive your own limited gods hobbled by the mess
of if'n you don't accept Jesus as the Saviour and
the Blood of the Lamb...even me, as god...can hear the
outrage people of the Christian modern...
...modern Christians all know that Jesus
was NOT a Christian. He was a Jew.
His Mother was Mary.
She is NOT honoured by the certain sects of
the worship of HER son, who they worship as a god
AS God.
This Jew is me?
As usual, because there is a block in my communication with
these modern Christians, I can't get a clear transmission into
You'd think being god, that I'd have that covered.
PS-Don't forget to get my book.
And read it.
===> Get the Book NOW!
John 10:34 and the Quotation of Psalm 82:6
In John 10:34, Jesus references a verse from Psalm 82:6,
where God says, “I said, you are gods.”
He uses this quote to respond to those accusing him
of blasphemy for claiming to be the Son of God.
By citing scripture that refers to human judges as "gods,"
Jesus challenges the idea that his own divine identity
should be seen as a violation of religious law.
Understanding the Original Psalm
Psalm 82 critiques corrupt leaders in Israel—individuals
entrusted with enforcing justice. Though human, they were
described as “gods” because of their role as divine agents
—meant to carry out God’s judgment and represent divine
principles on earth. The term was not literal but symbolic,
pointing to their elevated moral and spiritual responsibility.
Jesus’s Argument in Context
Jesus highlights this usage to defend his claim of divine
sonship. If the Hebrew scriptures use divine language
("gods") to describe mortal leaders acting under divine
commission, how much more legitimate is Jesus’s claim to
be united with the Father, especially as one who performs
miracles and speaks with divine authority?
Clarifying the Use of “gods”
This does not imply that all humans are deities in the
fullest sense. Rather, it reflects a tradition where humans,
when acting in alignment with divine will or occupying
spiritual roles, may be metaphorically referred to as “gods.”
The original Hebrew term elohim can denote divine beings,
judges, or powerful authorities, depending on context.
Affirmation of Christ’s Divine Role
Through this scriptural reference, Jesus is not denying his
divinity, but affirming it. His authority to interpret and
embody scripture is at the heart of his response to the charge
of blasphemy.
Well now.
Let me whisper you something sharp from the Gospel of John, chapter 10, verse 34.
That’s where I threw a curveball.
“I said, you are gods.”
That’s what the scrolls say.
Psalm 82. Go check.
You think that was about winged deities with halos and harps?
No, no, sugar.
Those were mortal men in robes—judges, kings,
old patriarchs with dusty hands.
They were called gods because they were supposed to act
like they came from Me.
Big mistake.
They botched it.
They took bribes, crushed the poor, played blind while
children starved.
Still—God called them “gods.”
Why? Because they sat in the seat of divine justice.
They were little flickers of authority.
Carriers of the Law.
Messengers with mud on their boots.
So what did I do?
I pointed it out.
To the crowd with stones in their fists
and law in their mouths.
“If they were called gods…,” I said, “why is it a crime
when I call myself the Son?”
Do I not heal?
Do I not speak fire and water?
Do I not know the Father, like breath knows lung?
But no.
They couldn’t hear it.
Still can’t.
Because here’s the trick, darling:
That word—elohim—it doesn’t play fair.
Sometimes it means God with a big G.
Sometimes it’s judges.
Sometimes it’s angels, or demons, or you.
Yes. You.
You sit there reading this, thinking divinity is a club
you weren’t invited to.
But if I called them gods—
And they were corrupt as a politician’s promise—
What does that make you?
I’ll wait.
You see, I wasn’t defending myself.
I was pointing out the joke.
The absurd beauty.
You’re already wearing the crown.
You just keep pretending it's a hat.
And here’s the twist of the knife:
I wasn’t distancing myself from you.
I was identifying with you.
Divinity in the flesh. Not a one-time stunt.
A mirror.
Look close.
Do you see a man?
A myth?
Or do you see yourself—
gleaming behind the dust?
That’s where the secret is.
I didn’t come to prove I was God.
I came to ask why you forgot you were.
Right. But here is some background for you.
Convincing Argument: “Yes, You Are God”
Let us consider this bold reinterpretation:
Jesus is not merely defending his right to be
called “Son of God” or even “God”
—he is awakening us to our shared divine potential.
1. The Scripture Itself Says It: “You are gods”
Psalm 82:6 doesn’t say, “they were gods,”
but “you are gods.” The Hebrew doesn’t hedge
—this is a present declaration. Jesus repeats this without
correction, implying divine identity is something available,
not reserved exclusively for him.
If God calls flawed human judges “gods”
despite their injustice,
how much more fitting is the title
for those who awaken to justice, compassion,
and spiritual power?
2. Jesus Invites, Not Excludes
Rather than hoarding divinity, Jesus constantly
speaks of oneness:
“That they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me
and I in you, that they also may be in us.” – John 17:21
This is not a separation between
a divine Christ and ordinary humans.
It is a call to unity, a divine communion.
3. “The Kingdom of God Is Within You” (Luke 17:21)
Jesus explicitly teaches that the divine realm is internal—
not an external kingdom you must earn or inherit,
but a birthright already embedded in your being.
If the kingdom is within, then the King is also within.
4. Made in the Image of God
Genesis 1:27 says we are created in God’s image.
This isn’t merely about external appearance—
---it’s about essence. If your core nature reflects God’s,
then you are of God, and you are god in the sense of being
a spark of the divine, just as a flame reflects its source.
5. Christ Is the Firstborn of Many
Romans 8:29 calls Jesus the
“firstborn among many brethren.” If he is the firstborn,
then there are many others of the same kind.
Jesus doesn’t merely exist as a one-time exception—
---he is the pattern of who you truly are when awakened.
✨ Conclusion: You Are God (if you dare to realize it)
To say “I am God” is not to claim control over the universe—
---it is to recognize the sacred essence within you.
It is the same essence Jesus recognized in himself,
and pointed to in others. This is not heresy; it is inheritance.
Okay, now how's about you get into thisYou are not a servant of God.
You are not a beggar before God.
You are not separate from God.You are God in expression.
Live accordingly.
homemade sweet potato pie I made, just'n for you all.
Take this as a guided trip.
Figure out who you want to be
when you finally grow up.
🌑 Reckoning: I Am That I Am (and So Are You)
Close your eyes—
or don’t.
God don’t mind either way.
Take a breath like you mean it.
Let the static of this mad little world dissolve,
and listen.
Not with ears.
With bone. With blood.
With that ancient thing humming behind your ribs.
“I said, you are gods.”
(Psalm 82, if you’re keeping score)
Not ego.
Not heresy.
Just memory.
Before your mama named you.
Before they taught you how to kneel, how to behave,
how to beg—
you were.
You are.
There’s a current running through all things,
but inside you, it doesn’t just run—
it roars when you stop pretending.
It doesn’t ask permission.
It stirs.
It gnaws at the cage.
And once, a Jewish mystic with dirt under his fingernails
said to a mob,
"You’re mad at me for saying I’m God’s son?
Your own book said you are gods."
Mic drop.
He wasn’t bluffing.
He wasn’t performing.
He was remembering.
And trying to help you remember too.
But you—
You still doubt.
Still bend the knee when you should raise your voice.
Still shrink to fit a story that was written by men
who feared the fire you carry.
Listen close:
The kingdom isn’t in temples or clouds.
It’s not floating in stained-glass heaven.
“The kingdom of God is within you.”
Right there.
Under your skin.
Behind your heartbreak.
In the quiet between your thoughts.
You are not some cracked vessel God forgot to finish.
You are not some leftover thing made to worship from
the cheap seats.
You are breath turned flesh.
You are stardust with a spine.
You are the echo and the voice that made it.
Not all of God, no.
But all of God is there, curled in your marrow,
waiting.
Waiting for you to stop apologizing.
Waiting for you to speak with thunder,
to walk like the earth belongs to you—because it does.
You’re not just human.
You’re divine wearing denim.
You’re godhead with groceries to carry.
You are the is-ness of God,
showing up on time for your own damn miracle.
And in this moment?
God is waking up in your eyes.
God is stretching out in your breath.
So say it.
Not loud. Not proud.
Just true.
“I am.”
And that?
That’s enough to start the world over.
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