Who is God?

Money, Purpose, and God; those are the most asked about concepts people who read Becoming ask me about. Who is God in your dream? I know for a lot of people, the belief in a God, and his or her devotion to this higher power is the reason for existing. “God has a plan for me.” “God decided to take him away from me, so there must be a reason.” “Soon Jesus will resurrect and save everyone who has given him their faith.”

“If everything is a reflection of my vantage point of Consciousness, than I’m religion, I’m God?” Even if you aren’t a religious person in the typical sense, the concept of God has almost assuredly found its way into your dream. A lot of people who read Becoming or books like it seem to feel threatened by the idea that nothing is truly sacred in the religious sense. “If everything is a reflection of my vantage point of Consciousness, than I’m religion, I’m God?” Absolutely yes! You are God. I am God. At the end of the day though, there is no God. There is no omnipresent overseer judging right and wrong, good and bad, or even righteous and sacrilegious.

Have you experienced intense Emotional Charges when acknowledging your power in the face of whatever God you believe exists? The stories surrounding Jesus, evolution, Mormonism, the Qur’an, the Kabbalah, and various spiritual idealisms are all your power being demonstrated. Equally, in the storyline of your dream, none of these stories even make sense or have the potential to receive verification from scientific experts. Truth be told, pretty much every religion out there is more fantastic than anything I wrote in Becoming. Have you experienced intense Emotional Charges when acknowledging your power in the face of whatever God you believe exists?

Your stories and beliefs are completely unique to the person (identity) you’ve written with your attention. Religion, spirituality, or any structured belief system is an amazing opportunity to give away your power. By attaching yourself to a particular belief, you are destined to meet opposition and feel the need to prove your conviction right. Can you prove anything? Absolutely not, because this is your experience. Your stories and beliefs are completely unique to the person (identity) you’ve written with your attention. Equally, you’ve created people in your dream to give you the opportunity to react to appearances or acknowledge your power in absolutely everything… Wow, does that sound a little too religious?

Sorry.

The idea that a “space God” has some sort of plan for you is a perfectly brilliant way to dimempower yourself. Remember though, this is 100% your experience.If you’re experiencing financial hardships, and instead of acknowledging your power, you’re content to blame your spouse, your parents, your boss, the economy, etc., it’s still 100% your experience. Becoming isn’t a religion, or even a formula. It’s not something you’ll ever necessarily talk about. There’s no right or wrong way to apply any of the concepts. It puts the responsibility (response-ability) for your experience securely in your own hands. Religion asks you to believe in separation, disempowering you from having sole (soul) accountability. The idea that a “space God” has some sort of plan for you is a perfectly brilliant way to dimempower yourself.

If you’ve given all of your power away to appearances, and only the belief in God keeps you motivated to keep moving forward in life, when somebody inevitably challenges your faith, you will very likely fight for your convictions. It’s no secret that some of the bloodiest circumstances that have ever been played out in the dream of consciousness are based upon religious beliefs or opposition to them.

If I could some up religion’s place in the concept of Becoming, it would be this: Everything is your power, including God, Consciousness, and anything Metaphysical. Every experience is equal, so if you are joyfully acknowledging God is your power being demonstrated, what might it appear like in your experience when the limitations and stories told about God dissolve?