Another Analogy Involving us and our View of God.

We know that if we look through a pair of binoculars, we can see things too small or too far away to see with the naked eye. If we reverse the binoculars, and look through them backwards, everything looks smaller and farther away.

The more powerful the binoculars, the nearer or farther things appear to be. We know, however, that things are precisely as far away as they actually are, regardless of the lens or lenses between us and what we’re seeing.

The Loving Programmer is as close as the Request that He told us to make when we needed Programming Assistance. When He was on earth, He enumerated for us the Programming Assistance for which we should ask; “Our Father,(Don’t know if the four words that follow make a request, but they could reflect where we want Him to be and what we want Him to be doing.) Who art in Heaven, (1)hallowed be thy name. (2)Thy Kingdom come, (3)Thy will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven. (4)Give us this day our daily bread and (5)forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and (6)lead us not into temptation, but (7)deliver us from evil.”

If we see that we are close to God, we will make those seven (or, eight) requests to Him for Programming Assistance and see that He is at work in our lives. If we think that God is distant, both in distance and in caring, we will not bother praying this prayer. We will not be aware that He can provide us with endless amounts of help.

The entire purpose of Catholic Fundamentalism is to make God seem nearer by understanding that He is, in the words of our time, “The Loving Programmer”. He can program in many dimensions, and has the power to program particles. These, He compiles into systems and beings, the most complicated of which are us people. The hierarchy of sub-Programmers helps Him get everything downloaded and working just so.

He programmed us within The Creation Program and wrote our human programs in such a way that we would have free will. To give us that, He had to make us unable to intellectually prove that He did it.

The more visible He is to us, the more clearly we see that it is wiser and more productive to be obedient to His will than our own.

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