REASON IN REVOLT

Did God Get High Before Choosing Jesus?

If omniscience ever had a hangover, it must have been the day God supposedly decided to reveal Himself through a barefoot carpenter in a Roman backwater. Out of all galaxies, epochs, and civilizations, the Almighty apparently looked down and said, “Yes — that dusty strip of Judea, that’s where I’ll stage the greatest cosmic drama of all time.” It’s the sort of decision that makes you wonder whether He had sampled something aromatic from the gardens of India before drafting the plan. Because if the divine strategy was to compress infinity into a local prophet, crucify Him, and then rely on fishermen to handle global marketing, the Lord’s judgment was—how shall we put it—philosophically impaired.

We are told that this was all part of the “mystery of faith.” But faith has a suspicious habit of beginning where logic dies. If an omnipotent being wanted to communicate universal truth, He could have chosen a medium less geographically restricted and more empirically verifiable — say, simultaneous appearances across civilizations, or at least a live broadcast. Instead, He picked a pre-scientific age, no recording devices, and a crowd easily impressed by levitating bread. That isn’t divine revelation; that’s cosmic improv.

And what a plot! The Creator of the universe disguises Himself as a baby, hides in a stable, grows up as a carpenter, then gets executed for blasphemy against Himself. Hollywood would reject the script for lack of coherence. Yet billions recite it weekly with solemn faces. The same crowd that now demands double-blind trials for vaccines believes that a crucifixion two thousand years ago solved the metaphysical debt of all creation. If that’s divine reason, perhaps heaven’s quality control department needs a reboot.

The theologians, of course, have an answer for everything. “It’s not supposed to make sense,” they say; “that’s why it’s sacred.” How convenient. The same logic could sanctify any absurdity, from talking snakes to water-walking messiahs. But here’s the twist: the less believable the story, the more holy it becomes. That is theology’s finest psychological trick — it converts confusion into depth. The faithful don’t understand the plan, so they assume it must be brilliant.

Yet even as satire, the story offends logic. If God is truly omniscient, He already foresaw the Holocaust, Hiroshima, and the Inquisition. And His one preemptive intervention was… to have Himself nailed to a Roman cross? Either He was spectacularly bad at forecasting or spectacularly committed to theatrics. It’s as if the CEO of the universe solved the problem of evil with a publicity stunt. A reasonable deity might have started with universal healthcare or the abolition of slavery, but no — our celestial strategist chose atonement by agony.

Christianity’s genius lies in making this sound profound. Suffering became sacred, blood became currency, and guilt became global. God didn’t simply create man; He invented customer loyalty. The whole theology functions like a divine subscription model: free trial of grace, eternal charges for renewal. If you lapse in belief, your account is cancelled — permanently. What was marketed as salvation turned out to be spiritual credit scoring.

And it worked. For two millennia, humanity has worshiped the contract it could never read. The cross, we were told, is love. But in corporate terms, it’s just a long-term branding exercise. Rome killed the rebel, then franchised his ghost. The Church became the authorized distributor of divine forgiveness — and the planet became its sales territory. A perfect business model: infinite guilt, renewable grace, zero refunds.

What’s astonishing is not that ancient people believed it — their cosmology allowed for miracles, demigods, and thunderous patriarchs. What’s astonishing is that twenty-first-century adults, armed with telescopes, DNA sequencing, and quantum physics, still repeat the slogan: “Jesus died for our sins.” The mind that can build a particle accelerator yet cannot recognize myth as metaphor is proof that evolution has a sense of humor.

So maybe God did get high before choosing Jesus. Maybe He took a deep cosmic puff, exhaled across galaxies, and thought, “Let’s see what happens if I try the human thing once — just for laughs.” The result was a religion that conquered empires, built cathedrals, burned heretics, and still calls it love. If this was divine inspiration, it came with a serious case of theological munchies.

The theology that followed was equally creative. God, it turned out, wasn’t just the CEO — He was also His own unpaid intern. He sent Himself to earth to satisfy Himself with the death of Himself so that He could forgive the creatures He Himself had designed to fail. If Kafka had written religion, he couldn’t have topped it. The Holy Trinity reads less like metaphysics and more like an executive meeting gone wrong: the Boss, the Son, and the Spirit walk into a boardroom, and nobody can explain the org chart.

This might all have remained harmless mythology if it hadn’t been weaponized. But no enterprise that trades in salvation can resist market expansion. Once you believe your product is the only path to eternity, conquest becomes philanthropy. The Crusades were customer-acquisition campaigns with swords. Colonization was global evangelism with shipping routes. “Spreading the Gospel” simply meant exporting guilt. No wonder the planet still hasn’t recovered from the side effects.

Meanwhile, the theologians kept inventing fine print. Sin became hereditary, grace became exclusive, and obedience became the premium plan. Faith was marketed as freedom while functioning as subscription. The small print: cancellation comes with eternal damnation. The genius of the system was its psychological loop — it created the disease it claimed to cure. You’re born guilty, you die unworthy, and you pay installments of piety in between. What aspirin is to headaches, Jesus became to existential panic.

Even the miracles fit the product line. Water into wine — the first case of divine catering. Walking on water — early aquatic branding. Resurrection — the prototype for repeat business. Each miracle was a commercial teaser, reminding audiences that the Almighty had exclusive distribution rights to reality. But like all advertising, it aged poorly. The trick no longer works once the audience demands evidence. The faithful call it mystery; the skeptic calls it stagecraft. God, apparently, retired when peer review arrived.

Philosophers tried to tidy up the mess. Augustine blamed human lust; Aquinas blamed insufficient theology; Kierkegaard blamed reason itself. Every century produced a new apologist, each insisting that the absurdity was the point. “Believe because it’s impossible,” they said, as if nonsense were proof of transcendence. That’s not spirituality — that’s Stockholm Syndrome with incense. A god who demands faith over reason doesn’t test devotion; He exploits confusion.

Still, the emotional engineering is brilliant. Guilt plus love equals control. No empire has ever invented a more effective behavioral formula. When Rome governed by fear, rebellion brewed. When the Church governed by guilt, obedience bloomed. You can overthrow a tyrant; you can’t overthrow your own conscience. The crucifix became the perfect psychological device — a picture of suffering that made you grateful for your oppressor. Worship your rescuer, fear your redeemer, and never ask why an omnipotent being needs your constant applause.

And the cost? Two thousand years of self-inflicted misery disguised as morality. A civilization that calls pain sacred will always mistrust joy. The West learned to associate virtue with self-denial, intelligence with blasphemy, and curiosity with sin. The cross became the filter through which all happiness had to pass — sanitized by sorrow before it could be holy. Even laughter required repentance. Somewhere along the way, salvation turned into the art of feeling bad correctly.

Modernity, of course, tried to sober up. Science came along and gently took the bottle from God’s hand. The telescope replaced the pulpit, the microscope replaced the miracle, and the confession booth gave way to the therapist’s couch. But the hangover remains. The secular mind still whispers Christian guilt in a new accent. We call it “impulse control,” “moral responsibility,” or “cancel culture,” but the ghost of the Nazarene still manages the conscience department. Civilization changed costumes; the script stayed the same.

Perhaps that’s the true miracle — that a deity’s bad trip became the operating system of half the planet. If God did inhale before choosing Jesus, He clearly never sobered up enough to issue a recall. The species, ever eager for meaning, kept the hallucination alive. The result is a world still running on divine fumes, mistaking smoke for spirit.

At some point the divine hallucination needed maintenance, so theology became customer service for the infinite. Questions like â€œWhy do the innocent suffer?” were routed to the apologetics department. The official answer never changed: mystery. It was the spiritual version of “please hold, your salvation is important to us.” Meanwhile, history kept dropping customer-complaint forms—plagues, inquisitions, genocides—and heaven’s help desk stayed on break.

The theologians called this love. â€œGod’s ways are not our ways,” they insisted, which conveniently explained every disaster. Flood wipes out humanity? Love. Earthquakes? Love. Child cancer? Tough love. If a mortal behaved with such selective affection, we’d call him abusive. But attach a halo and suddenly cruelty becomes pedagogy. God, the cosmic parent, keeps teaching lessons no student survives.

Christianity’s greatest invention wasn’t morality; it was marketing guilt as grace. You sin by existing, pay interest through confession, and receive forgiveness that expires the moment you think independently. It’s divine feudalism: the soul as property, the priest as landlord, and God as the distant monarch who never visits but always collects rent. The medieval Church didn’t merely believe this—it patented it. The sale of indulgences was the first subscription-based revenue model in Western civilization.

Even after the Enlightenment repossessed the throne of reason, the guilt economy adapted. The pulpit moved to politics, the sermon to ideology, the priest to pundit. The same moral hangover now fuels activism, nationalism, and even consumerism: virtue signaling is just the digital rosary. You no longer need confession; you have comment sections. The faithful once feared hell; now they fear trending. God outsourced judgment to the algorithm, and it never sleeps.

And still, the myth of divine sacrifice keeps humming beneath it all. The modern worker who sacrifices health for productivity is just the secular Jesus in business casual. The mother who glorifies exhaustion as devotion plays the same part. The idea that virtue requires pain has colonized every corner of life. Christianity may have retired its miracles, but it left us the moral addiction to suffering. We still can’t accept happiness without guilt or intelligence without humility; we still apologize for existing.

Philosophers tried to detox us. Spinoza prescribed reason; Nietzsche suggested laughter; Russell recommended skepticism. Yet each was treated like a relapse rather than a cure. Humanity doesn’t want sobriety—it wants a better high. So we replaced God with ideology, faith with patriotism, heaven with progress, and sin with carbon footprint. The intoxicant changed labels, but the dependency remained. We still crave an external conscience, some celestial auditor to certify our virtue.

The irony is exquisite: the species that discovered relativity and decoded the genome still kneels before an Iron Age morality play. We’ve mapped galaxies but not our own insecurity. The more we learn, the more anxiously we search for someone to bless the data. A rational universe terrifies us; a judgmental father comforts us. So we keep reviving Him—first as deity, then as ideology, now as artificial intelligence promising algorithmic fairness. God 3.0: now with improved analytics and zero empirical support.

And so the divine trip continues. The hallucination has become self-sustaining: churches as real-estate trusts, theology as branding, and faith as nostalgia for certainty. Maybe that’s what omnipotence really meant all along—not power over the cosmos, but over human attention. A deity who managed to keep His own obituary off the front page for two millennia deserves, at the very least, a marketing award.

But if we ever hope to wake up, we’ll need to admit the obvious: the problem isn’t that God was high when He chose Jesus. The problem is that we still are—high on the narcotic of divine significance. We keep chasing the next revelation like addicts searching for a purer dose of meaning. Reason offers sobriety, but sobriety feels lonely. Faith offers company, but the hangover is endless. And so humanity keeps praying into the echo chamber, mistaking the reverb for revelation.

At some point every binge ends, even the divine one. After two thousand years of theological intoxication, humanity is waking up with a hangover it can no longer pray away. The air smells of incense and irony. We have crucified curiosity, canonized guilt, and baptized fear — and now the bartender of history is closing the tab. The question is not whether God got high before choosing Jesus, but whether we are finally ready to come down.

Sobriety begins with laughter. Once you can joke about the Almighty’s odd career choices, you’re halfway to sanity. Humor is the last refuge of the thinking soul — a way to face absurdity without worshiping it. When we laugh at divine pretensions, we reclaim our evolutionary dignity. The ape who chuckles at God has already surpassed Him. For what is divinity worth if it cannot endure a punch line?

And what a punch line this religion has been. A perfect being creates imperfect creatures, blames them for imperfection, impregnates a virgin to give birth to Himself, and then kills Himself to forgive them for being what He made them. If this were not sacred, it would be diagnosed. The only reason theologians call it “mystery” is because “plot hole” sounds disrespectful. The miracle is not that anyone believes it; the miracle is that anyone can say it aloud without giggling.

But giggles are dangerous to power. The moment people laugh, the spell breaks. That’s why priests frown at satire and philosophers get excommunicated. Laughter is the sound of emancipation. It’s the mind realizing it can breathe without divine oxygen. Once you laugh at God, you no longer fear Him — and that’s what makes comedy holier than prayer.

The post-Christian world will not be a wasteland of meaning but a garden of sobriety. Once we stop worshiping pain, we can cultivate joy without apology. Once we abandon the idea of “chosen” anything — people, prophets, or planets — we can finally see that universality was never hiding in a manger. The divine, if it exists, is not a person watching us from above but the intelligence that flowers within us when we stop kneeling.

In that sense, Jesus is still useful — not as God, but as cautionary tale. He shows what happens when compassion meets superstition: kindness gets nailed up and theology steals the nails. His tragedy deserves respect; his canonization does not. He was a man who sought love and found dogma instead. We can honor his humanity without inheriting his mythology. That is the real resurrection — the rebirth of reason from religion’s tomb.

And if the Almighty truly did get high before launching this cosmic sitcom, we can forgive Him. The trip produced some exquisite art, beautiful music, and enough moral drama to keep philosophers employed for centuries. But the high has lasted long enough. The stars no longer need a babysitter, and humanity no longer needs a celestial therapist. It’s time to thank God for the stories, close the Bible, and open a physics textbook. The universe is vast enough without divine intoxication.

So let’s raise a toast — not to the God who smoked before creation, but to the species sober enough to finally notice. The next revelation won’t descend from clouds or bleed from wood. It will emerge from the clear-eyed laughter of minds that have outgrown their myths. And when that happens, even God — if He exists — might smile and say, “About time.”

Citations 

  1. The Holy Bible, New Testament (Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John).
  2. Spinoza, Ethics (1677).
  3. Bertrand Russell, Why I Am Not a Christian (1927).
  4. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Antichrist (1895).
  5. Ludwig Feuerbach, The Essence of Christianity (1841).
  6. Sigmund Freud, The Future of an Illusion (1927).
  7. Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World (1995).
  8. Bart D. Ehrman, How Jesus Became God (2014).
  9. Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion (2006).
  10. Reza Aslan, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (2013).