>>516057572
You realize pagans were ultra-openminded about religion right?
Like you told them about a new God and they would immediately listen, compare them to their own, perhaps even start worshiping him too.
And ideas too, for instance Plato adopted the idea of reincarnation from the Easterners quite readily.
They were very syncretic and that's exactly how Christianity got them.
In the beginning it was "just another God". The Greeks even had a "monument to the unknown God".
Anyway about my religion.
God I envision as some sort of primordial force. Maybe the Dao or a Platonic idea. Maybe all of these together.
But it's wrong to anthropomorphize him and frankly beyond us to grasp.
Below him are Gods, sentient beings who have ascended spiritually and are immortal and have super powers.
Perhaps Jesus and Buddha and such were such individuals.
I suspect they have their own civilization out there.
After death there is reincarnation. Karma is very real as well.
However between death and reincarnation there might be a period when your soul lingers in its own dimension aka heaven and hell.
However my key difference with Hindus and Buddhists on this matter is that you cannot for instance reincarnate into a cockroach.
A soul can only get older and wiser.
Each life it chooses because it wants to learn a lesson.
Perhaps in your next life you are apparently "worse off" than this one.
E.g. you were a billionaire and now you are a hobbo.
But that's exactly your soul trying to teach you a lesson.
Also you will note how many people are "NPCs" and are often called soulless.
This is ironically true. While they are not really soulless, they are younger less experienced souls. So for an older soul they do seem like children.
And finally about souls.
God does not create souls.
Souls create themselves.
That is the miracle.
You are your own God and manifested yourself out of nothingness.
Consequently souls are unpredictable and what adds randomness to the universe.