Tuesday, August 5

God is liquid: On Earth he is Blue as the Ocean.

Ever wonder why Water is always included in imagery of God? Ya know, holy water, living water, baptism, rivers like the Nile, Euphrates, Amazon, ect..

Simple: Its because God is symbolized in the most balanced form of matter.

Matter has 5 stages:

5. Plasma
4. Gas
3. LIQUID
2. Solid
1. Absolute Zero/Non Existence

Of course, God is all forms of matter, but Liquid, being in the middle, allows for all the other forms of matter to interact. I mean, water is what scientist look for when looking for life on other planets...

Which is why the Hindus portray God as having Blue Skin. Because water is our divine medium, we can understand how water starts off clear, then pools into big blue masses like the oceans.

In fact, they even call God an "ocean," and we are each water molecules pooling together to create life!

And how would aliens on another plants with a different dominant liquid see God? Like them, and the color of that liquid! What's even cooler is that scientist say that most of the Earth's water came from icy comets during the Heavy Late Bombardment period! And comets are some of the oldest celestial bodies in our solar systems! That sounds like God to me!

I mean, we are LITERALLY made of water!

Staying hydrated is crucial to all forms of life, even forms that don't use energy from the Sun, as has been discovered by scientist in underwater volcanoes.

And water is something all land and aquatic animals share. 

We call the Earth the Blue Planet because water is the Dominant force! The Earth looks like a big blue jewel from a distance.

So, for us Earthlings, God is a Blue Human representing the Ocean of existence  we bind ourselves to by binding each other. And water has hydrogen bonds, which is the first and most abundant element in the visible Universe and   gives water special properties!

And as we know, where there is a lack of water, life struggles to thrive.

Liquid is Universally divine. Water is Locally Divine.

PS: Did you know GLASS IS ACTUALLY A SLOW MOVING LIQUID? Hmmm...





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