DO I BELIEVE IN GOD?

And this is the question that is asked to me today following some of my writings that could provoke the question.
And quite a question!

The question in four words contains two magic words: belief and divinity. Perhaps we should define at least one of these two words to better appreciate an answer.


I could start by saying that belief is a kind of hope.
Or say like Julius Caesar that we believe what we desire. And everyone believes what he or she wants to believe. It was Demosthenes who said this before me.
Is it not that the human being needs to believe in something greater than himself, because to believe is one of the greatest forces of the universe.

Who doesn't believe in the sun, even when it rains?
It is important to understand that if we cannot believe, we cannot form an opinion. What would be our capacity to act or to judge?
Imagine what the world would be like if we were deprived of this ability. We would be made to do what we want.
No! We have to believe. It does not matter! It is our strength. To believe in God or not, that is not the problem.

Hannah Arendt warned us that if the world lies all the time, we will end up not believing in anything. And this new reality will never leave us.

And what about God?
Jean Jacques Rousseau said that all the things that God does are good and when man interferes, interferes and interferes in them, they become bad and evil like a plague.
And here my friend Raphael Levy reminds me that if God exists, he is in the eyes of children. What could be more beautiful, more healthy!

A certain Nietzsche said that God is dead, but it is Nietzsche who is dead forever and Jean D'Ormesson will say that God is forever.
Men are perhaps nothing but the dream of God.
Can it be that God is only a dream of men?
Is it God who created man or man who created God?
With the genius of the men of these days, nothing is impossible.

Lecteur, si tu as un commentaire, une idée, une suggestion, s'il te plait communique la moi à Jacques@SagesseOuEsTu.com