I’m not a theologian. I’m not a physicist.
I’m just someone who’s stared deep enough into both equations and scripture to recognize they might be speaking to the same mystery in different dialects.

I believe in God and in science.
Not as opposites. But as collaborators.

Science drives my mind. Religion anchors my soul.
One asks how. The other asks why.
Both matter.


👁 The 1% Rule

The further I go into mathematics, physics, or quantum theory, the closer I get to something... unspeakable.

A boundary.
A silence between the numbers.

Science has limits. Not because it’s flawed — but because it’s honest.
And beyond those limits, I’ve found room for faith.

That’s where God lives:
Not in the gaps, but in the awe.


📜 Sacred Texts & Selective Reading

The Bible. The Qur’an. The Baha’i writings.
They all reach for meaning. For structure. For justice.

But let’s be real: most of us cherry-pick.
We quote the comforting parts and skim the rest.
It’s easier that way.

Yet how can we claim belief in something we don’t truly read, or understand?

This isn’t just a problem of religion. It’s a literacy crisis of the soul.


⚛️ Blame Without Belief

In a culture where “God damn it” and “Jesus Christ” are said more casually than “thank you,”
we’ve emptied these names of meaning.

We deny God exists—then get mad at Him.
We remove reverence—and wonder why we feel hollow.


🤝 What Comes Next?

The world doesn’t need more arguments. It needs integration.

Science once belonged to the faithful.
The first physicists and chemists were monks, mystics, seekers.

We can reclaim that legacy.
We can be both rigorous and reverent.


💡Final Thought:

If you only embrace the material world, you may stay perpetually unsatisfied.
If you only embrace faith without questioning, you may stay perpetually afraid.

The future belongs to minds that can hold both.
Because we’re not here just to know the universe —
We’re here to feel it, too.
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