On top of this, the movie separates God from religion, from religious rituals, from blind obedience, and from superstition.
But the background for certain existence is that there must be a god, there must be a god, and there is absolutely no "godlessness" in the complete sense.
Seeing some comments expressing dissatisfaction with this point, I hope to see an ending that completely breaks everything, vanishes everything, and vanishes everything.
(Then why are you looking at this? Just go to the Marxist-Leninist masterpiece.)
It doesn't really matter whether there is a god or a godlessness. It doesn't matter who the god is, and it doesn't matter whether or not the god exists.
The important thing is whether you choose to believe.
Do you think that as a human, you have your weaknesses, your uncontrollable evils, and your imperfections.
And in that case, do you decide to believe that there is a supreme place where you can believe.
Nothing else, no sacrifice, sacrifice, praise, worship, fear, just simply believe.
If you believe it, then you believe in God and have nothing to do with everything else.
Me, I believe it. I didn't believe it before, but then someone changed me.
That person is Dostoyevsky.
In "Brothers Karamazov", he portrayed such a person, Ivan Karamazov, he didn't believe it, he just didn't believe it. He stood there, knew everything, thought about everything, but he finally said: "I don't believe it." In the
end, he found that he couldn't bear this kind of unbelief. I mean, he found that he didn't believe it. It was not God that was hurting. It's himself.
The reason why people believe in God is for themselves, not for God. But apart from faith, there is really no need to do anything else.
God is everywhere. God who has lunch with ants, anywhere.
You just have to try to believe.
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