Want Necessitates God.

What does the tepuis toad want in life? Food, water, the bare necessities? Or the ownership of a particular tree, mating rights to its neighborhood crush, and who knows what else.

For over 50 million years, the tepuis toad communicates in a language we still don’t understand. So there’s an equal probability that any one or a mixture of the above answers is true. We simply wouldn’t know for sure.

This conclusion yields yet another important question in case we take our chances and say that God does directly or indirectly control the destiny of the toad.

Whose God is the most powerful?

Ours, the universal one? Just because our perspective of the world is much larger than the toads’, of course — yes our god is more powerful.

Let’s dive in a bit deeper into this thought experiment.

Imagine a being with a much larger perspective than the one we limit with our human kind.

A being with a self-realization of the word God as being the source and substance of its very existence — so much so, the word “God” would be non-existent in that beings’ vocabulary.

These beings, through some order of nature, may have come to realize that they themselves are the gods, capable of influencing and controlling similar things to what the God on our Earth controls and influences. They would have unraveled the secrets of our indefinable cosmos and mastered its controlling mechanism.

Our definition of God would then pale in comparison. We then, would be the tepuis toads for those beings, and our God would certainly be less powerful, and as all dictators — imperfect.

But what if the tepuis God, our God, and the God of the higher beings are one? No chance!

Imagine a tepuia church in all its glory!

The (personal) tepuis God is just a tree dwelling God, with no exposure to the literature we’ve been exposed to. Hardly a chance that it has its own church!

Our God is most certainly a He, has a name — and physical characteristics much similar to our own. Our god can also be impersonal in nature — defined as formless — an invisible entity within or without ourselves (but one that still controls us).

The higher beings? Self-realized Gods themselves.

Maybe then, instead of one God being the true God, all Gods are true, and differ only in terms of hierarchical classification and sense perception of the individual beings and their stage of scientific and introspective development.

The Gods can then be classified in the following hierarchy: