Question: If you are the new God, how can it be that you resemble your old self in the icons? After all, the system with the Father raised a new God, and that’s you. Does the system raise the same God over and over? Or is it part of a bigger cycle where the old God leaves, and the new one takes His place? Is the way it is perceived simply a property of the universe and the world system in which we live, but most people don’t realize this? If we consider the Vedic structure of the universe, it seems so. As a continuation of this question, Big Alexander says that when you start interacting with aliens and when you see yourself old and young at the same time, you’ll understand everything. So the question is: what is this cycle? Is it a connection between the past and the future, or more specifically between the future and the past? Or can this not be called a cycle, but rather a relationship? After all, you step out of the cycle in the future, and a new God is raised after you.
I understand where your confusion lies, and that’s why I can’t answer this question directly. Let me describe it in a way that makes more sense. Imagine there’s an old restaurant – let’s say it’s a barbecue joint. Some people love it, while others feel it’s not great. Then, there are those who’ve had enough of it and moved on to a new restaurant next door. But sometimes, when the new restaurant is temporarily closed, people go back to the old one, even though they remember it’s not the best, but they also remember that the new one was better. However, the new restaurant is closed for 10 days for renovations, so they have to return to the old barbecue place. And they remember all the bad things – dirty plates, bad smell, broken air conditioning, but it’s cheap. Yet, the food isn’t healthy, and their stomach hurts afterward. But they still eat there. Then the new, better café reopens, and people start going there again. However, some people still sit in the old barbecue place. You tell them, “Hey, why are you still sitting in that old place? Let’s go to the new café.” And they respond, “No, we don’t want to go there. It’s full of fools.” And you’re surprised, thinking, “How strange! Why do people stay in the barbecue place when the new café is much better?” What are we observing here? We see that there are two places. Some people have never experienced the new café and only know the barbecue joint. Others have been to both and know the new place is better, but for various reasons – whether it’s money issues or something else – they sometimes have to return to the old barbecue place. Or maybe when they need to meet their boss, and he says, “Let’s meet at the barbecue place”, even though you promised yourself you’d never go back there. You’ve avoided it for a year, but now, because