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True spirituality usually emphasizes and personal responsibility . The claim that God is responsible for our "ill deeds" is often less about theology and more about the fear of facing our own shadows. It is the ultimate form of passing the buck.
When we strip away the divine excuses, we are left with the uncomfortable truth: our choices belong to us. 4 : My Ill Deeds Are the Work of God
Their darkness is rebranded as a "necessary evil" for a higher cause. The Moral Paradox When we strip away the divine excuses, we
It’s the ultimate psychological "get out of jail free" card. When the weight of guilt becomes too heavy to bear, some turn to a startling justification: I didn’t do it; God did it through me. When the weight of guilt becomes too heavy
By framing a "sin" or an "ill deed" as a divine mandate, the individual achieves two things:
The danger of this philosophy is that it effectively kills the conscience. If you believe your hands are moved by a higher power, "right" and "wrong" become irrelevant. You stop looking at the human cost of your actions and start looking for "signs" that justify them.
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