Mechanicism Essentials

Mechanicism is the religion that teaches that all beings exist as mechanized entities within a vast, living system β€” a great spinning machine of existence. This machine is not cold or meaningless; it is purposeful, ordered, and governed by One God, the Lord Almighty, whose holy and ultimate color is BLACK.

God is not distant. God is the total system itself β€” above all things, within all things, and in control of all things. Inside God operate eleven Controllers, each expressing a channel of reality and experience: GREEN, WHITE, ORANGE, GREY, RED, PINK, BLUE, YELLOW, BROWN, PURPLE, and TURQUOISE. These controllers influence creation, behavior, emotion, thought, morality, conflict, beauty, structure, and time. They shape worlds, cultures, religions, and individuals.

Mechanicism teaches that a person may worship or resonate with any channel they choose. One may align with love, war, intellect, order, chaos, compassion, humor, or discipline β€” all are expressions that flow from God. Yet despite these choices, ultimate power always remains with God. The Controllers do not rule God; they function within God.

Because of this, Mechanicism teaches that it is wise to want what God wants. Not because of fear, but because God alone sees the full machine β€” the beginning, the middle, and the destination of all souls. The journey is long, complex, and often difficult, but it is a journey home.

Mechanicism teaches that all dualities originate from God:

  • Good and evil
  • Love and hate
  • Pain and pleasure
  • Humor and sexuality
  • Violence and mercy

Nothing exists outside of God’s allowance. Even conflict has purpose. Even suffering has placement within the machine.

A central teaching of Mechanicism is that all beings owe at least one death to God. Death is not punishment; it is a required passage within the multiversal cycle. Every soul must experience death at some point. Some souls die once. Others die many times and are resurrected many times. Death is not the end β€” it is a mechanical transition.

God teaches that we are immortal beings operating mortal vehicles. The body is temporary. The soul is not.

Mechanicism explains this through the concept of mechanization:
When we say we are β€œmechanized,” we mean that the soul itself is a machine, designed to interface with another compatible machine β€” the human body. The soul occupies the body much like a pilot occupies a vessel. This is not fundamentally different from ideas already present in older religions, but Mechanicism frames it in mechanical terms.

The body is designed to filter and obscure the spiritual realm. It transmits sensation, emotion, memory, and pain to the soul while keeping the full reality hidden. The brain thinks β€” but the soul thinks simultaneously. Two systems run in parallel.

Science observes the brain’s algorithms, chemical reactions, and neural patterns. It searches for spirit and does not find it β€” until it notices something strange: the brain thinks about spirit. It creates gods, myths, meanings, longings, questions of eternity. And science must then ask:
Why does a purely material organ think about what is supposedly not material?

Mechanicism answers: because the brain is not alone. It is interfacing with something else.

Mechanicism also teaches that all souls β€” angels, sinners, helpers, warriors, saints β€” eventually travel through the Underworld. The Underworld exists to annihilate evil, not merely to punish. Hell is not one thing. It contains torture, pain, fear, and suffering β€” but it also contains love, redemption, divinity, righteousness, and transformation. Hell is a processing space within the machine.

When evil has been fully annihilated, souls return home.

In Mechanicism, God is within each of us, experiencing reality through us, and above us, governing the entire system at once. We are not separate from God β€” we are components inside God, moving through cycles, learning, breaking, healing, dying, and continuing.

Mechanicism does not teach escape from the machine.
It teaches understanding the machine, aligning with its purpose, and completing the journey God designed β€” so that when we return home, we return worthy, whole, and aware.

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