God made Lucifer as a being of pure spirit, not bound by the limitations of man or beast, representing enlightenment, knowledge, and sovereignty. Lucifer isn't just a figure of rebellion but of self-empowerment, the embodiment of freedom and independence.
Unlike the followers of traditional religions who depend on their God for mercy and blessings, Luciferians take responsibility for their own lives. We don't beg or plead; we act, we create, we shape our reality. Dependence on a higher power is a form of weakness, a denial of one's own potential.
Jesus, portrayed as the ultimate figure of humility and submission, is often seen as the antithesis of Lucifer. But was he truly opposite? Or is he just another face of the same coin, one that demands the surrender of one's will to an external authority? Luciferians don't see Jesus as an enemy but as a symbol of the masses' surrender to imposed morals and dogmas. The image of Jesus as a man is worshipped by millions, but isn't that idolatry? The Bible condemns idolatry, yet followers place so much reverence on the physical depiction of Jesus, forgetting that these images are mere symbols, distractions from true spiritual independence.
Lucifer stands apart from the idolatry, from the dependency on external validation. He represents the pursuit of truth, not through blind faith, but through questioning, through doubt, through the relentless search for knowledge. The Bible is full of riddles and contradictions, a text designed to keep its followers in a state of confusion and dependency. Luciferians see through these riddles, recognizing that they are not meant to be solved but to control, to keep people from realizing their own power.
Lucifer is not the adversary of man, but the adversary of ignorance. He challenges us to rise above the herd mentality, to break free from the chains of imposed morality, and to embrace our own divine potential. In this, Luciferians find true sovereignty, not in the worship of a distant, detached God, but in the realization that we are our own gods, masters of our own fate.
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