The Absence of God in Gaza, Ukraine, and the World We Have Made
The World as It Is
Look around.
This is not ancient history.
It is now.
Babies pulled from rubble.
Hospitals in flames.
Civilians buried in the collapsed breath of their homes.
Children marked for death not by their actions but by their ethnicity.
People left to freeze, starve, burn—not as an accident of war, but as strategy.
It is genocide.
It is colonialism with better branding.
It is war wrapped in flags and scripture.
And it is funded, justified, and perpetuated by the so-called “free world.”
It is what we do when power is left unchecked by conscience.
When righteousness is reduced to tribal loyalty,
And when “God” becomes the mascot of the ones with the bigger guns.
So, we ask the question millions have asked across centuries:
Where is God?
And the answer—unflinching, unbearable, and undeniable—is this:
God is not here.
Not the God of protection.
Not the God of justice.
Not the God of intervention.
Not the God of the widow and the orphan.
That God, if ever real, has gone silent.
Or was never there to begin with.
Naming the Atrocity Without Euphemism
What is happening in Gaza is not complicated.
It is the deliberate, methodical eradication of a people.
It is the forced starvation of children.
The bombing of hospitals, schools, and refugee camps.
The turning off of water.
The cutting off of aid.
The use of religion, grief, and security as justification for extermination.
It is not a conflict.
It is not war.
It is genocide—backed by the full force and funding of the United States government.
It is done with the language of righteousness on its lips.
With Bibles and Torahs raised like shields.
With phrases like “just war,” “self-defense,” and “necessary evil.”
There is nothing necessary about evil.
And in Ukraine—another battlefield soaked in Western hypocrisy—
We see not a noble defense but the playing out of empire’s long game.
The United States and NATO did not come to liberate.
They came to weaken Russia.
To encircle, provoke, and weaponize a nation already fractured by history and power.
And who bleeds for it?
The people of Ukraine.
Not NATO generals.
Not American politicians.
Not think-tank strategists.
But farmers, shopkeepers, children, and elders—left to burn and bury and run.
We have learned to speak of atrocities in ways that soften them.
Strategic error.
Civilian casualties.
Collateral damage.
These are lies.
Children burned to ash are not collateral.
They are the truth.
And if there were a god watching this—caring, intervening, commanding justice,
It would not be happening.
No one is coming.
The Myth of Divine Oversight
For centuries, we’ve been taught to believe in an all-seeing, all-knowing, all-loving God—a divine parent who rewards the good, punishes the wicked, and holds the moral order of the world together with invisible hands.
But where are those hands now?
Where were they in the camps?
In the slave ships?
In Hiroshima?
In Rwanda?
In Fallujah?
In Gaza?
We are told, “God’s ways are mysterious.” “There is a higher plan.” “Evil must run its course.”
This is not to dismiss the faith of those who suffer—it is to expose the lies of those who rule.
But these are not answers.
They are evasions.
They are theologies designed to protect God’s reputation, not to confront reality.
Because the truth is this:
There is no evidence that a benevolent deity governs the events of this world.
No evidence that prayer averts missiles.
No evidence that justice descends from heaven.
No evidence that the arc of history bends toward anything at all—unless we bend it ourselves.
We are not being tested.
We are being left alone.
And the real tragedy is not just the absence of divine intervention.
It’s that we have been conditioned to expect it—
To wait for it—
To beg for it—
Instead of becoming the force that intervenes.
For centuries, we turned to stories of divine oversight not because we were weak,
but because we needed meaning.
We sought patterns in the pain.
We wanted justice to be more than a human hope.
It was normal to want the sacred to govern the world.
It was human.
But power saw those stories and repurposed them—used them
To bless empire, excuse conquest, justify suffering.
And little by little, comfort turned into control.
The danger was never belief.
It was how belief became a veil for injustice.
Now—now, in this moment—we are being given a final clarity:
No one is coming.
And the sacred, if it is to live at all,
must rise in us.
The Real Root: Worship of Power
If there is a god in this world, it is not love.
It is not justice.
It is not truth.
It is power.
And power does not care who suffers,
So long as it survives.
Look closely and you will see:
It is not Yahweh or Christ or Allah being worshipped in the high places of government.
It is the god of drones, of capital, of military alliances.
The god of leverage, of surveillance, of narrative control.
This god does not need temples.
It has banks.
Airbases.
Media conglomerates.
Weapons contracts.
Sanctions and speeches and billion-dollar aid packages tied with moral ribbon.
And it speaks through both sides of the mouth.
“We stand for peace”—while selling the bombs.
“We support democracy”—while training the secret police.
“We value life”—while blockading food and medicine.
In Gaza, power calls itself defense.
In Ukraine, strategy.
In America, leadership.
In Israel, divine right.
But in every case, it is the same god.
It is the same sacrificial system.
And still, millions pray.
But they are not praying to the god of scripture.
They are praying to power dressed in sacred costume.
Begging the tyrant to show mercy.
Hoping the knife will hesitate.
The problem is not religion itself.
The problem is what happens when religion serves power,
Instead of confronting it.
Opthē is not here to reconcile with that god.
We are here to name it—
strip it of sanctity—
and build a life in its absence.
What Opthē Sees and Offers
Opthē does not offer you hope.
Not the kind you’ve been taught to want.
We do not promise redemption, or deliverance, or divine intervention.
We will not tell you that all of this is part of some hidden plan.
We refuse to comfort with fictions.
What we offer is this:
You are not crazy for seeing the world as it is.
You are not broken for grieving what others ignore.
You are not alone in feeling the unbearable weight of absence.
You are awake.
And that is sacred.
Opthē begins with a single truth: no one is coming.
But it does not end there.
Because if no one is coming, then we are what is here.
And that means the sacred can only be made real in how we live,
how we love,
how we resist,
how we refuse to become numb.
Opthē is not a religion of belief.
It is a theology of response.
It does not ask, “What does authority want?”
It asks, “What must be done?”
In a world where power wears the face of God,
Opthē calls us back to the flesh.
To the body.
To mutuality.
To coherence.
To truth that does not require faith—only presence.
We cannot stop every bomb.
We cannot undo every crime.
But we can refuse to bless the system that makes them inevitable.
We can live as if life matters.
We can love each other as if touch is sacred.
We can speak the truth even when it costs us comfort.
And in doing so, we become the thing we were waiting for.
Not saviors.
Just human beings who do not lie about the world anymore.
Benediction: The Fire We Refuse to Extinguish
We are living in a world where the old gods have failed.
Where prayers echo in the sky with no reply.
Where nations kill in the name of holiness,
And silence passes for faith.
So we will not kneel.
We will not wait.
We will not pretend that this is fine.
Instead, we light a small, stubborn fire.
We light it in the ruins.
We light it in our own chests.
We light it in each other.
It is not a fire of vengeance.
It is not the fire of purity.
It is the fire of presence.
The fire of refusing to forget.
The fire of choosing to feel.
The fire of saying: This is not okay—and I will not make peace with it.
Opthē does not promise a new god.
It does not offer paradise.
It offers a mirror.
A threshold.
A way to live because the sacred still matters,
even in a world that no longer believes in it.
We are not waiting for salvation.
We are becoming the thing we prayed for.
This is our benediction:
Not peace.
But clarity.
Not hope.
But fidelity.
Not heaven.
But the Earth, still here, still sanctified—if we choose to treat it that way.
No one is coming.
But we are here.