Episode #3 - How do Gods Survive?
My question is: how do gods survive?
I don’t mean in the way theologians talk about survival, with eternity and omnipotence and all the comforting abstractions, but in the messy, human way that belief actually works over time. Because once you strip religion of its poetry and its rituals, gods have a very concrete problem. They only exist as long as people believe in them, and belief is not a given. It has to be maintained, protected, and sometimes aggressively defended.
So in practice, gods have options.
They can recruit slowly and patiently through prophets, stories, miracles, and promises, hoping that new followers will abandon old habits and loyalties in favor of a new way of seeing the world. They can rely on inheritance, trusting that belief is passed down through families and traditions, taught to children before those children are old enough to ask uncomfortable questions. Both methods work, sometimes.
And then there is the option nobody likes to say out loud: a god can survive by eliminating its rivals.
If you can prove that another god no longer works, you don’t need to persuade anyone. You don’t need philosophy or debate. You just have to let people watch what happens when prayers stop being answered, and when priests suddenly have nothing to offer but excuses. In an economy of belief, nothing travels faster than the visible collapse of a god’s power.
That is the lens I want to use today.
So let’s talk about how gods survive.
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