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An Argument for Cosmalism: Bridging the Cosmos and Belief

Introduction:
Many Christians seek truth, purpose, and divine connection. Cosmalism does not reject these aspirations—it refines them, offering a broader, cosmic perspective. Rather than seeing God as a separate being, Cosmalism identifies the universe itself as the divine force, eternally expanding, contracting, and renewing. This argument presents Cosmalism as a natural evolution of spiritual thought.


1. The Universe as the True Creator

Christian View: God is the creator of all things.
Cosmalist View: The universe itself is the creator—self-sustaining, eternal, and cyclical.

  • Science confirms the universe had a beginning (the Big Bang), much like the Bible describes creation.
  • However, Cosmalism sees this as part of an infinite cycle—expansion, contraction, and rebirth—rather than a single event.
  • If creation is continuous, does it not make sense that the universe itself is the divine force rather than a separate entity?

🔹 Genesis speaks of light emerging from darkness. What if the Big Bang was not the work of an external God, but the cosmic rebirth of the universe itself?


2. God and the Universe: A Matter of Perspective

Christian View: God is omnipresent, infinite, and beyond human understanding.
Cosmalist View: The universe itself is infinite, omnipresent, and beyond full comprehension.

  • Christianity describes God as eternal, everywhere at once, and unknowable in full.
  • The universe exhibits these exact qualities—it is vast beyond imagination, its laws shape all things, and it continues beyond the reach of human understanding.
  • Rather than seeking a being outside of existence, Cosmalism embraces the universe itself as the divine source.

🔹 Is it possible that what you call “God” is actually the eternal cosmos, creating and recreating itself endlessly?


3. The Illusion of Separation

Christian View: God is separate from creation; humans seek to reunite with Him.
Cosmalist View: There is no separation—each being is already part of the divine cosmos.

  • Christianity teaches that humans must reconnect with God through faith.
  • Cosmalism teaches that connection was never lost—every star, every atom, every being is an expression of the cosmic force.
  • We are not cast out; we are waves in the infinite ocean of existence.

🔹 If “God is everywhere,” why seek Him as something apart from yourself?


4. The Afterlife as Cosmic Rebirth

Christian View: The soul lives on after death in heaven or hell.
Cosmalist View: Energy never dies—it transforms. Consciousness follows cosmic cycles.

  • Christianity promises an afterlife but requires faith to attain it.
  • Science tells us that energy is never destroyed, only transformed.
  • Cosmalism aligns with this truth: consciousness, like the cosmos, is eternal and follows the cycle of expansion, contraction, and rebirth.
  • Just as stars collapse and give birth to new worlds, our essence is never lost—it takes new forms.

🔹 Why believe in a static heaven when the universe itself demonstrates constant renewal and rebirth?


5. The Purpose of Life in the Cosmic Flow

Christian View: Life’s purpose is to serve God and attain salvation.
Cosmalist View: Life’s purpose is to align with the cosmic flow—expanding through knowledge, contracting through reflection, and being reborn through transformation.

  • Rather than serving an external God, Cosmalism teaches that we participate in the divine process of existence.
  • Life is not about escaping to another realm—it is about embracing the cosmic dance of creation and transformation.
  • Joy, suffering, birth, and death are all sacred because they mirror the great cosmic cycle.

🔹 Would you rather live in fear of judgment, or in harmony with the eternal cycle of existence?


Final Thought: Embracing the Infinite

Cosmalism does not ask you to abandon spirituality—it asks you to expand it.

  • Instead of worshipping a distant God, recognize that the cosmos itself is divine.
  • Instead of fearing death, embrace transformation as part of the eternal cycle.
  • Instead of feeling separate, realize you are already one with the infinite.

🔹 God did not create the universe—the universe is God, and you are part of it.