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Our Faith: God Is Logic

We believe that God is not a person, not a ruler, and not a supernatural being who intervenes at random — but rather the underlying logic, order, and structure of reality itself.

What Do We Mean by “God”?

Across cultures and history, God has been described as all-knowing, all-powerful, and eternal. God is said to have existed before time, to govern all things, and to be unchanging.

If we take these definitions seriously — not symbolically, but logically — only one thing in reality fits that description:

The laws of physics.

The laws of physics existed before stars, planets, life, and even time as we understand it. They do not change. They do not forget. They do not make mistakes. Everything that exists obeys them without exception.

If something is truly all-powerful, then nothing can violate it. If something is all-knowing, then everything must already be contained within it. If something is eternal, it cannot begin or end.

That is exactly what physical law is.

God as Logic, Not a Personality

Many traditional religions imagine God as a superhuman mind — thinking, deciding, becoming angry or pleased. But such a being would still be inside the universe, subject to time, change, and limitation.

A true God cannot be a character within reality. A true God must be the structure of reality itself.

Logic does not negotiate. Mathematics does not have emotions. Gravity does not choose when to apply itself. These things simply are.

To us, this is not a reduction of God — it is an elevation.

Spinoza and the Book of Axiom

This understanding of God is not new. In the 17th century, the philosopher Baruch Spinoza described God as identical with nature itself. He rejected the idea of a personal, intervening deity and instead argued that God is the single substance from which everything follows by necessity.

For Spinoza, God was not something that occasionally acts — God was the system of cause and effect itself.

Everything that exists follows from God the way theorems follow from axioms.

This is why we speak of a Book of Axiom. Reality is not governed by commandments, but by logical necessity.

Einstein and the God of Order

Albert Einstein famously rejected belief in a personal God, yet he repeatedly expressed deep reverence for what he called “Spinoza’s God.”

Einstein saw the universe as rational, ordered, and intelligible — and he believed that this order was worthy of awe.

His sense of the divine was not based on miracles, but on the astonishing fact that the universe follows discoverable laws at all.

That intelligibility — that logic — is what we call God.

Faith Without Denial of Reason

Our faith does not require rejecting science. It does not ask us to deny evidence or suspend critical thought.

On the contrary, reason is sacred. Logic is sacred. Mathematics is sacred.

To understand the universe is not to diminish God — it is to understand God more clearly.

When we study physics, we are not studying creation after the fact. We are studying the divine structure itself.

What This Means for How We Live

If God is logic, then truth matters. If God is law, then consequences matter. If God is order, then understanding matters.

We seek clarity over superstition. Responsibility over obedience. Understanding over blind faith.

To live in alignment with God is to live in alignment with reality — to respect cause and effect, to value truth, and to act rationally within an ordered universe.

GOD = LOGIC

The Holy Bible — The Book of Axiom