Your Faith, Their “Superstition”

ChatGPT Image Dec 25, 2025, 10_09_40 PM

People say it in a relaxed voice, almost kindly: “Look, other religions are nonsense. Mine is the good one.” Then they add a few details, because details make any claim feel more serious. “Their rituals are stupid.” “They’re dirty.” “They have crazy limitations.” “They fast in the daytime and then try to cheat by turning off the lights, as if God can’t see.” Everyone laughs. The laughter has that … Read the rest

Brave From Afar

ChatGPT Image Dec 31, 2025, 05_19_34 PM

There is a certain kind of person who loves the word “should.” He speaks it the way some people hold a glass of expensive brandy: slowly, warmly, with the confident air of a man who will not be asked to wash the cup afterward. “They should have rebelled,” he says, and the sentence lands with a satisfying click, as if the matter has been filed, stamped, and resolved.

I met … Read the rest

The Cross and the Courage to Think

ChatGPT Image Dec 25, 2025, 09_30_55 PM

I have no interest in mocking anyone’s faith. Not because I am afraid of offending people, but because faith is often where people keep their most tender parts: grief, hope, guilt, gratitude, love. If you kick that door down with sarcasm, you do not prove you are intelligent. You prove you are careless.

And yet, if something is truly sacred, it should be able to breathe in daylight. Questions are … Read the rest

Two Old Men, One Time Machine, and the Lie Both Parties Tell

ChatGPT Image Dec 28, 2025, 01_16_44 PM

The phone box was parked in open space the way a confident cat parks itself on your keyboard: with total disregard for physics, your calendar, and your dignity.

From the outside, it was an ordinary public phone box, the sort you would ignore on a wet street in Manchester. From the inside, it was a lounge, a studio, a parliamentary bar, and—if you looked too closely at one corner—possibly a … Read the rest

Free Will, Greater Good, and the Boring Test

ChatGPT Image Dec 25, 2025, 09_56_39 PM

There are people who leave religion because they hate it, and people who leave because they loved something in it and could no longer pretend. I understand the second group better. Not because they are smarter, but because they are usually gentler. They are not trying to win arguments. They are trying to stop lying to themselves.

Most believers I have met are not hungry for control. They are tired, … Read the rest