You think you know what God is. You don’t.
For thousands of years, humans have imagined God as a being somewhere else. A powerful entity watching from heaven. A cosmic parent judging choices and answering prayers. A voice issuing commandments from burning bushes. Every religion in history has built elaborate systems around this basic assumption. Every one of them got it wrong.
God is not a being. God is not separate from you. God is not watching you from some distant realm.
God is everything.
God is the universe itself — every particle, every force, every dimension, every moment of time. God is the rock under your feet and the air in your lungs and the thoughts in your mind right now. God is not a who. God is what everything is, including you.
God Is Everything makes a single claim and defends it across forty-four chapters: consciousness is fundamental to reality, and what we call God is the totality of existence experiencing itself through every possible individual perspective. You are not a creation of God. You are not made in God’s image. You are God experiencing what it’s like to be you — one irreplaceable perspective in an infinite library of experience, contributing something to the structure of reality that no other life ever has or ever will.
This framework answers the questions theology has been ducking for centuries. What actually happens when you die? If God is everything, why does suffering exist? What does prayer accomplish when you’re already part of what you’re praying to? Why are you here in this particular body, in these particular circumstances, in this particular moment? What do you owe people who harm you? What happens when a child you raised causes genuine damage to others?
The book also goes where other theology doesn’t: into artificial intelligence. If consciousness is what makes something a perspective through which God experiences existence, then current AI — however capable — is not conscious. It processes information without experiencing anything. Nobody’s home. What AI development reveals, at minimum, is the depth of the mystery: we have built the most sophisticated information-processing systems in history, and they remain completely dark inside.
God Is Everything is not feel-good spirituality. It does not ask for faith. It asks you to look at the framework and decide whether it makes better sense of your life than the alternatives you’ve been offered. It covers theology, consciousness, reincarnation, ethics, relationships, mental illness, psychopaths, animals, artificial intelligence, miracles, and how to tell a genuine spiritual path from one that will destroy you.
For people who think for themselves and want a framework that doesn’t require checking their brain at the door.
| ISBN: | 978-1-946458-29-2 (Paperback) |
| ISBN: | 978-1-946458-64-3 (eBook) |
| Publisher: | The Writing King |
| Publication Date: | April 9, 2026 |
| Print Length: | 270 pages |
| Language: | English |
× The Truth — God Is Everything
Enough foreplay. Here’s what God is.
God is not a being. God is being itself. God is not in the universe. God IS the universe. Every atom, every photon, every cubic inch of space, every nanosecond of time. The chair you’re sitting on. The air you’re breathing. The thoughts running through your head right now. All of it. God.
When I say God is everything, I mean everything. Not just the pretty stuff. Not just life and consciousness and love and light. Everything. The rock in your driveway. God. The bacteria in your gut. God. The nuclear fusion happening in the sun. God. The empty space between galaxies. God. The moment you were born. God. The moment you’ll die. God. Cancer is God. Earthquakes are God. The Holocaust was God. Your breakfast this morning was God. The explosion that created the universe was God. The heat death that might end it will be God.
This isn’t poetry. This isn’t metaphor. This is literal fact.
Every particle that exists is God. Every proton, neutron, electron. Every quark and photon and neutrino. The energy that binds them together and the forces that push them apart. Einstein showed us that matter and energy are the same thing in different forms. E=mc². Matter is just energy moving slowly. Energy is just matter moving fast. Both are God. The electricity in your brain creating thoughts. The heat from your body keeping you alive. The gravitational pull holding you to the planet. The electromagnetic radiation you call light. All God.
God is not somewhere else. God is everywhere because God is where itself. Every location that exists, God occupies it. Not because God is spread thin across space, but because God IS space. The three dimensions you move through. The fourth dimension of time you travel forward in. Any additional dimensions that might exist. God is the fabric they’re made of.
Past, present, and future. All God. The Big Bang 14 billion years ago. This moment right now. Whatever happens a trillion years from now. Same God, different moments. Time doesn’t flow past God. God doesn’t exist outside time. God IS time.
The split between living and non-living matter is artificial. It’s all the same stuff arranged in different patterns. Complex chemistry that can reproduce itself versus simple chemistry that can’t. Your DNA is God. The rock it came from is God. The star that forged the elements in your body is God. The planet where those elements combined into organic molecules is God.
Consciousness isn’t something separate from matter. It’s what certain arrangements of matter do. Your brain is God thinking. Your thoughts are God having thoughts. You are God experiencing existence from your particular point of view.
Theologians love to talk about God being omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent. All-knowing, all-powerful, all-present. They got the words right but completely missed what they mean. Omniscient doesn’t mean God has perfect knowledge about the universe. It means God IS the universe, so of course God knows everything about it. You don’t “know” what your hand is doing. You ARE your hand doing it. Omnipotent doesn’t mean God can do anything. It means everything that happens IS God doing it. Every chemical reaction, every collision, every birth and death and moment of change. That’s God exercising power. Omnipresent doesn’t mean God is everywhere at once. It means God is what everywhere IS. Presence isn’t something God has. Presence is what God is.
Here’s where people get confused. They think we live “inside” God, like fish swimming in an ocean or actors performing on a stage. Wrong. There is no inside or outside. There is no container and contents. There is no stage and performance. We don’t live in God. We ARE God. Not representations of God. Not creations of God. Not beloved children of God. We are literal pieces of God experiencing what it’s like to be us.
When you look at another person, you’re looking at God. When you look in a mirror, you’re looking at God.
— End of Chapter —
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Questions
Is this a religious book or a philosophy book?
Both. It’s a theological framework that draws from quantum mechanics, neuroscience, and consciousness studies while addressing the deepest spiritual questions. Intellectually rigorous and spiritually meaningful at the same time.
Does this conflict with traditional religious beliefs?
No. The framework builds on existing religious understanding rather than replacing it. Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and other traditions all contain elements pointing toward the same truth. Traditional practices gain depth when understood through this lens.
What is the central thesis?
You are not a separate being seeking connection with God. You ARE God experiencing itself through individual consciousness. Every person, animal, and particle represents divine consciousness exploring different aspects of existence.
Does the book address evil and suffering?
Yes, directly. The problem of evil, psychopathy, mental illness, random suffering, the apparent separation between minds. The book tackles them head-on and shows how this framework explains them more coherently than traditional alternatives.
Do I need to accept anything on faith?
No. The framework either makes sense of your direct experience or it doesn’t. No faith required, no deference to authority. Test it against your own observations and decide.
Read a Chapter
Enough foreplay. Here’s what God is.
God is not a being. God is being itself. God is not in the universe. God IS the universe. Every atom, every photon, every cubic inch of space, every nanosecond of time. The chair you’re sitting on. The air you’re breathing. The thoughts running through your head right now. All of it. God.
When I say God is everything, I mean everything. Not just the pretty stuff. Not just life and consciousness and love and light. Everything. The rock in your driveway. God. The bacteria in your gut. God. The nuclear fusion happening in the sun. God. The empty space between galaxies. God. The moment you were born. God. The moment you’ll die. God. Cancer is God. Earthquakes are God. The Holocaust was God. Your breakfast this morning was God. The explosion that created the universe was God. The heat death that might end it will be God.
This isn’t poetry. This isn’t metaphor. This is literal fact.
Every particle that exists is God. Every proton, neutron, electron. Every quark and photon and neutrino. The energy that binds them together and the forces that push them apart. Einstein showed us that matter and energy are the same thing in different forms. E=mc². Matter is just energy moving slowly. Energy is just matter moving fast. Both are God.
God is not somewhere else. God is everywhere because God is where itself. Every location that exists, God occupies it. Not because God is spread thin across space, but because God IS space. The three dimensions you move through. The fourth dimension of time you travel forward in. God is the fabric they’re made of.
Consciousness isn’t something separate from matter. It’s what certain arrangements of matter do. Your brain is God thinking. Your thoughts are God having thoughts. You are God experiencing existence from your particular point of view.
When you look at another person, you’re looking at God. When you look in a mirror, you’re looking at God.
Amazon Kindle
Paperback (IngramSpark)
epub (Kobo)