God treated as religious plankton
In Polish politics there exists the term political plankton, referring to lower-rank individuals belonging to parties or running in various elections. Their role is usually to raise their hand during votes. These people have little of their own to add creatively within a given political group.
Some religious groups are structured on a similar principle, including many Christian sects.
Let us note that God—and God alone—is worshiped in Islam and in Judaism, although not in all sects. In Hinduism and Buddhism, God is not mentioned. Christianity, on the other hand, treats God as insignificant religious plankton.
Any Mass, at least in the Polish Catholic Church, lasts about an hour or slightly longer. According to rigid, written rules, during it the name of Jesus is mentioned about 75 times, Mary several or a dozen times, or various other Mother-of-God figures and different regional saints. At Mass, priests and politicians are always mentioned as worthy of veneration, and somewhere within this religious-political plankton references to God are also squeezed in. Officially, and according to the guidelines, God is mentioned about 7–8 times during the Eucharistic liturgy. This gives the proportion: God once, and Jesus ten times more. The effects of elevating Jesus above God—and tenfold at that—are that by 2025 Jesus has married 400 women in Poland. His harem is expanded by thousands of barracked nuns, which glorifies him more than God, who has no wife.
Seeing God within the plankton, Luther was the first to remove from the Decalogue the second Mosaic commandment forbidding idolatry. The Roman Church did this in 1917.
Christianity is not the only religion determined to expel God from social awareness and to drown Him in plankton among numerous lesser deities.
Opublikowano: 11/02/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: God


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