Don't Blame God by Alexandra Shankland by Alexandra Shankland | Page 7

DON’T BLAME GOD Introduction For Iris, Arty and P, there are no better friends or teachers, for the others along the way and to come but most of all for my only child, for not having me committed. Throughout the ages, any form of divination, prophecy, soothsaying or spiritual mumbo jumbo has been greeted with a seesawing tradition of acceptance or rejection. We crucified a man named Jesus Christ, yet bestow our unbending faith upon him today. We burned the so-called witches at the stake, as we appointed astrologers to the king’s court, lauding them for their wisdom and guidance by the stars. In this, the twenty first century, we eagerly seek out the modern day witches for their predictive prowess, flippantly dismissing the science of astrology as nothing more than entertaining flim-flam, shunted toward the back pages of women’s magazines. We have both worshipped and killed in the name of our beliefs; unseen Gods and personal truths. Science battles blind faith for the ultimate accolade; proof of life eternal and the completion of us. Louis Pasteur once said; “How do you know that the incessant progress of science will not compel scientists to consider that life has existed during eternity and not matter? How do you know that in ten thousand years one will not consider it is more likely that matter has emerged from life?” In more recent times, greats such as Cayce, Moody, Monroe, ConanDoyle, Tesla and Tolstoy have all publicly mulled over the tr ]و