The Fundamental Difference Between the Belief in God and the Worshipping of God 3/3
I do believe, however, that billions of people, without the aid of storytelling, could come to their own belief in a god—that each of them could, on their own, come to some sort of internal determination that a god, indeed their very own personal god, exists. But, billions of people do not come up with the belief, on their own, that some so-and-so flew into outer-space on a winged horse and broke the moon in two; or that there’s going to be some messiah someday to save humanity from itself; or that there already was a messiah but that that messiah was martyred, believed to return to be the savior of the souls of humanity one day—they do not each of them silently come up with those very specific ideas on their own—those billions of people are told that story. Now, as to their belief in whether they are convinced by those stories that a god exists, that is up to them—but, they do, all of them, have one identical belief: the belief in god—all of them—and I believe that that belief is a false-belief.
…hence, adeology.