God Is Not the Property of Any Nation

The sun rises over every continent the same way. It does not linger longer over one nation or withhold its light from another. If God is the Maker of that sun, and of every human being who wakes beneath it, then it makes no sense to me that He would belong to one ethnicity, one nation, or one bloodline.

I refuse to accept that idea. The God I believe in is the Creator of the heavens and the earth, the Maker of every human being, regardless of race, language, or ancestry. If God made all people in His image, then no single group can claim exclusive ownership of Him.

Tradition Is Not the Same as Truth
Throughout history, people have elevated their own traditions, institutions, and identities above the universal nature of God's love. This shows up in exclusivist theology: the idea that belonging to a particular chosen nation, lineage, or institution is the key that unlocks access to the divine, rather than one expression of faith among many sincere ones. I reject that conclusion, not because tradition has no value, but because tradition is not the same thing as truth, and truth doesn't need a passport.

My faith is rooted in the conviction that God does not show favoritism. His invitation is extended to every person willing to seek Him with sincerity. No one should have to adopt another people's identity, or place any human group on a spiritual pedestal, in order to have a genuine relationship with God.

Question Everything, Including the Popular Answer
I believe truth should never be accepted blindly. Every teaching deserves to be examined with humility, wisdom, and a sincere desire to know God, not swallowed whole because it's old, because it's popular, or because everyone around you accepts it without asking why. Unquestioning acceptance looks like this: inheriting a belief system fully formed and never once asking whether it holds up, simply because to question it feels like betrayal. Faith built that way is fragile. Faith should be built on conviction, examined and re-examined, not on pressure, fear, or inherited certainty.

A Rejection of an Idea, Not a People
This is not a rejection of any people. Every person deserves dignity and respect. It is a rejection of any belief system that elevates one ethnic identity above the rest in matters of access to God. I believe God calls all people equally and judges each person by the condition of their heart, not by their ancestry.

Where My Allegiance Lies
My allegiance is to God alone, not to ethnic privilege, cultural superiority, or inherited human tradition. I believe His grace is available to all who seek Him, and no nation holds a monopoly on His presence, His truth, or His love.

If you've ever felt that a relationship with God required first becoming someone you're not, adopting an identity, a lineage, a culture not your own, I want you to hear this clearly: that was never the requirement. Seek Him sincerely, as you are. That's the invitation.

That is the conviction I stand on, and I will not compromise it.

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