We Can Accept Cause and Effect Yet Not Accept God as Father

Debra (Debi) Yvonne Simmons
2 min readJul 31, 2022

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What is removed from this equation is love and a relationship that is vital.

The comprehension of how something that is one, “cause and effect,” without using a “personality” seems to be comprehensible to humanity. And it is easy to understand how one came before the other even though they are one.

Now, when we bring the “He loves me.” part in we shun that part of it and in so doing I suspect that we lose a significant construct that is vital to accepting our own existence and Him/Source/God/Father/Creator of all that is.

We lose the ability to have a “relationship” with the Wholeness of what we are unitedly when we say there can be no “God.” That relationship is so choice, so sweet, so benevolent (kind), and of such exquisite Love. It is innocent and pure, something that can be trusted beyond anything that we can comprehend here on earth.

It is interesting to me that humanity or some within it would not desire that or even allow themselves to desire it or will it to be so..

It is probably because I understood a “greater than I,” beyond my parents and such, as a child that does not have to have understanding and merely accepts the knowledge that is given from beyond themselves that I do feel comfortable saying that I have an eternal Heavenly Father.

It does not come because my earthly father was terrific. In fact, one could say quite the opposite but my childish heart knew he, too, was good and perfect and loved me despite evidence to the contrary.

(My life challenge has been to give myself that same acknowledgment by not beating myself up for perceived flaws.)

I think this has something to do with becoming like a little child to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. You have to find that within that “knows” there is nothing but love for you.

It must have been something I worked through over lifetimes before because I came here with it. I just have to accept it about myself.

And yet, maybe we all come that way and find ways to block it out and not accept the “knowing” that is our birthright.

Photo by Altınay Dinç on Unsplash

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Debra (Debi) Yvonne Simmons
Debra (Debi) Yvonne Simmons

Written by Debra (Debi) Yvonne Simmons

Atonement, His (Christ’s) Story, Three Temptations: Addiction, Power-Hunger, and Depression, “Seeing” Truth in the “Unseen”, Living Above the Chaos C U there :)

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