I think it made sense for God to give us freewill and let us make our own decisions and live with it.

Imagine for a second that you're omnipotent, limitless, boundless and you are created this people that have an expiry date.

You have made them as unique as possible.
And wherever there's uniqueness, there'll be friction. Frictions will constitute actions that must be taken to ensure survival. These actions they will define as good or bad.

Would it make more sense to let it play out, or would you want to intervene at all times?
When some of them say there's no God, would you swoop in show them that indeed you exist; taken into cognizance that you created them in one day and they can be replaced just as easily.

You have nothing to prove to them, so let each ones do according to the will of his heart.
Let them live out their short lives and stay out of it for the most part.

Because what does a God really want? What is left after being God?

To be worshipped? Maybe
To be prayed to? Maybe

But I think it is to find your own flaw, to find your own limit.
What does a God really want?

When you are the beginning and the end, what else?

God must really get bored up there.

But I think he lets us take on our own lives just so he can see how it plays out without interference. (maybe a little; the kind you get when you need just
a little push to achieve something. The itch that comes from watching a golf ball sit at the edge of a hole.)

Maybe God looks up to those little moments. When you are bigger than the biggest; it must be those little moments. How the earthly rich desire in the simple pleasures.
I think God decided to limit himself to make this world habitable for the creatures of his hands.

So he gave us freewill.

Imagine if God intervened at all points. Like when Nigerian politicians say they won an election by his grace when in fact he had nothing to do with it
and they had killed anyone that stood in the way of their ambition.

Or when you use God to bear false witness.

I think freewill is God's test to test his own limits.

It makes sense that something limitless will endlessly search for a limit.

How much can a God bear?
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