User blog comment:DYBAD/Character Sheet/@comment-25135454-20171011120908/@comment-4867780-20171025040441

So what you call "soul" in your setting actually refers to the Great Guardian's essence, while soul is the mainstream sense of spiritual self are called "spirit" ? Meaning people's spirit is what we can consider their soul ?

Really ? I thought the point of heaven was simply to offer a happy afterlife for the faithfuls, never heard about the idea of them being assimilated into God, which is pretty freaky when you think about it ^ ^;

How can humans be made for infinity when everything about us is so relative ?

I somehow get the feeling you are indirectly trying to justify the real-life icing indifference of God for the horror of war, rather than immersively adress the idea in the fictional setting you have created. As mentioned above, the First Soul doesn't have to do everything he can for them (and shouldn't for the reason you mentioned), but there is a world of difference between fixing everything and sitting iddly by. Preventing wars for example is the very least he can and should do, even more so since these only happen because his creations are heavily flawed in the first place, which is no one's fault but his own. So keeping the worst of their nature at bay is clearly one of his main responsibilities towards them, on top of a moral duty towards the countless innocents who inevitably end up paying the price of others' sins - here again because of his own shortcomings.

A god that doesn't clean up his own mess is no god at all, just an average child fooling around with his handmade toys, or a cold-hearted scientist experimenting on his home-brewed guinea pigs to see what happens next.

Considering the loads of shit only happened because he deserted his Guardian key position in the first place, is he really in any position to be angry about it ? ^ ^;

The more I read about him, the more he comes off as an irresponsible child. But maybe that's the point, maybe for all his power and knowledge he's actually still one, not having personally matured enough to really act like a responsible adult yet, despite being so much older chronologically speaking.