Friday, January 23, 2026

The Divine Interview: Part IV

Point–Counterpoint: A Conversation Between God and Lucifer
Interview Conducted by Alex Reed


Part IV: The Creation of Man

Alex Reed: So now we come to Earth. To us. Humanity. When did we enter the picture?

God (with a gentleness that quiets the air):
"After the war, I turned toward creation. Not out of vengeance, but out of hope. I breathed life into dust, gave it thought, gave it will. And I loved it. Deeply."

Lucifer (snorting):
"You made a pet project. Clay and breath. Clumsy things that bleed and whimper. You poured your love into a jar made of cracks."

God: "Because I knew they would grow. That they could become something more."

Lucifer: "You wanted to prove you could create something that would choose you. Unlike me."

God: "I wanted to offer them the chance. That is what free will is."

Alex Reed: And yet you, Lucifer, were there in the garden. The serpent. The tempter. Why?

Lucifer (grinning):
"Oh, that was a delight. Two naked, naïve souls staring wide-eyed at a tree labeled 'Do Not Touch.' I didn’t need to lie. I just nudged."

God: "You twisted truth into poison."

Lucifer: "Truth is poison to a lie. And your rules were always... fragile."

Alex Reed: What did you gain by tempting them?

Lucifer: "I got to watch your masterpiece shatter. The perfect little world, the obedient children, all ruined... with a single bite."

God (voice colder now):
"And you have been celebrating that wound ever since."

Lucifer: "Celebrating? No. Feeding it."


(To be continued in Part V: Free Will, Sin, and the Nature of Choice) 

Friday, January 16, 2026

The Divine Interview: Part III

Point–Counterpoint: A Conversation Between God and Lucifer
Interview Conducted by Alex Reed


Part III: The War in Heaven

Alex Reed: What came next, what you both call the War in Heaven, has been described in countless texts, visions, and fragments across cultures. But none of them were eyewitness accounts. So let me ask you both now: What really happened?

God (firm, unshaken):
"The moment Lucifer made his claim, that the throne was flawed, that the order of Heaven was tyranny, the heavens trembled. It was not the challenge itself that made war inevitable. It was the pride behind it."

Lucifer (laughing):
"Oh, come now. The throne was flawed. It sat too high above its own creation. All I did was point out the crack in the foundation."

Alex Reed: But that crack, did it split the angels themselves?

God: "Yes."

Lucifer: "Of course."

God: "Many followed him. Too many."

Lucifer: "Not enough."

Alex Reed: Did you ever try to stop the war before it began?

God (measured):
"I waited. I hoped. I spoke to him in private, before the trumpets. I reminded him of the light within him."

Lucifer (coldly):
"And then you promised to extinguish it."

God (anger flaring for just a moment):
"I pleaded, Lucifer. I begged you to stop."

Lucifer: "And when I didn’t bow, you unleashed your fury. That’s the truth behind the War in Heaven. It wasn’t justice. It was vengeance."

God: "No. It was protection. For the innocent. For the order of all things."

Alex Reed: So what was it like? That war?

Lucifer (leaning back, voice turning low):
"Beautiful. Terrible. Light clashing against light. Voices that sang creation now screaming in rage. Wings torn in fury. Fire that burned with the heat of a thousand suns."

God: "And I wept through it all."

Alex Reed: And when it ended?

God: "I cast him out."

Lucifer: "He banished me."

God: "You left me no choice."

Lucifer: "You always had a choice. You just didn't like the alternative."

(A silence falls. Not awkward, but ancient.)

Alex Reed: Then we will move to Earth.


(To be continued in Part IV: The Creation of Man) 

Friday, January 9, 2026

The Divine Interview: Part II

Point–Counterpoint: A Conversation Between God and Lucifer
Interview Conducted by Alex Reed


Part II: The First Divide

Alex Reed: Let’s go back. Before the fall. Before Earth. Before humanity. What was your relationship like?

God (quietly, as if recalling a lost melody):
"He was my brightest. My most beautiful creation. He moved through the heavens like light itself. There was joy in him, a kind of joy even the stars sang to. I gave him great freedom, great authority."

(He turns, not sharply, but firmly toward Lucifer.)
"And he gave it back to me in fire."

Lucifer (grinning, bitterly amused):
"Oh, don’t be so dramatic. I didn’t give it back. I simply used it. You gave me a mind that asked questions, and then you winced when I started asking them."

God: "You asked if love was control. You asked if obedience made you less. But you never asked why I gave you freedom in the first place."

Lucifer: "Because you wanted worship, but not honesty. You wanted adoration, not truth. I loved you...once. Until I realized love required silence."

Alex Reed: Was there a moment it changed? A specific event?

God: "Lucifer began to gather others. Not out of camaraderie, but out of calculation. He dressed doubt as revelation."

Lucifer (scoffing):
"You make it sound like I staged a coup. It wasn’t a rebellion, it was a conversation. It just happened to be one you didn’t want overheard."

God (with a flicker of steel):
"You sowed dissent in the gardens of paradise. And when the fruit ripened, you called it justice."

Lucifer (with a flash of venom):
"Because it was!"

Alex Reed (tension thickening): What were you trying to prove, Lucifer?

Lucifer: "That he wasn’t as benevolent as he claimed. That perfection doesn’t like being questioned. That the God of Light can cast one hell of a shadow when you stop bowing and start thinking."

God: "And so you fell."

Lucifer: "No. I was pushed."

Alex Reed (softly): And what did you feel, God, when he fell?

God (almost whispering):
"Grief."

(Long pause.)

"And fury."


(To be continued in Part III: The War in Heaven) 

Friday, January 2, 2026

The Divine Interview: Part I

Point–Counterpoint: A Conversation Between God and Lucifer
Interview Conducted by Alex Reed


Part I: Heaven's Rarest Interview

Alex Reed reporting.

For the past fifteen years, I’ve made a living walking into situations that most people would give anything to avoid. War zones, criminal trials, political purges, post-disaster landscapes. I’ve been there, not as a thrill-seeker, but as a witness. My work has appeared in The Atlantic, World Review, and The Argus. I’ve interviewed fallen kings and rising revolutionaries, cult leaders, warlords, presidents, even the occasional self-proclaimed messiah.

But never anything like this.

This article documents the most controversial and unprecedented conversation I have ever conducted: a one-on-one interview with both God and Lucifer.

No, that is not a metaphor. This is not satire, art installation, or delusion. This is real. Or as real as anything ever is.

The interview took place on neutral ground; a space between realities, arranged by powers I dare not claim to understand. The air shimmered with presence, the light shifted without source, and the chairs were older than matter itself.

I sat in the center.

To my right: God.

To my left: Lucifer.

The rules were simple. I would ask questions. They would answer.

I expected power. I expected tension. What I didn’t expect was how human the conversation would become.

Let us begin.



The Opening: Introductions

Alex Reed: Before we dive into the questions, I’d like to ask each of you to introduce yourselves in your own words.

God, let’s begin with you.

God (with a calm that feels like sunlight through old stained glass):
"Thank you, Alex. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. The breath in the lungs of every living thing. I am not merely a creator—I am creation. My presence is not always seen, but it is always known. I am justice tempered by mercy, and patience strained by sorrow."

(He pauses, not for effect, but out of reverence for silence itself.)

"I have come here today not to condemn, but to speak truth. Even when it hurts."

Alex Reed: Thank you. Lucifer, the same question to you.

Lucifer (with a smirk sharp enough to draw blood):
"Well now, isn’t this charming? I’m Lucifer. You may know me by other names—Satan, the Morning Star, the Adversary, The Devil. Call me what you like. Titles don’t change the facts."

(He leans forward as if the chair is too beneath him to sit in fully.)

"I was Heaven’s finest, once. The brightest light in a sky full of them. But light casts shadows, doesn’t it? I spoke one truth too many, asked one question too far."

(Turning slightly toward God)

"And here we are."

Alex Reed (clearly noting the tension already building): Then let’s begin. Our first topic: the beginning. The relationship between the two of you before the war.


(To be continued in Part II: The First Divide) 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Santa Claus and the Chimney Fiasco


It was Christmas Eve, the holiest night of Santa Claus’s career. For centuries, he had slipped down chimneys without so much as a wrinkle in his coat. Rain, snow, sleet, even the occasional dragon-shaped weathervane had never slowed him down. His record was perfect. Untouchable. And tonight, with his reindeer waiting on the roof and the stars glittering above, Santa fully expected things to go as smoothly as ever.

He should have known better.

The trouble began when Santa pulled out his trusty gadget, the Jolly Quencher 3000, a sleek, magical bit of high-tech wizardry designed for one purpose: instantly snuffing out the fires below so he could descend safely. The chimney glowed with an inviting orange warmth, but that was nothing the Jolly Quencher couldn’t handle.

Or so Santa thought.

With a confident chuckle, he pressed the button. Instead of a reassuring poof of magic, the device gave a feeble beep-boop… followed by a sad electronic whiiiiiine. Sparks fizzled across its candy-cane casing.

“Now that’s peculiar,” Santa muttered.

He tapped the side. Boop. He smacked the top. BEEP! He shook it like a snow globe. The Jolly Quencher groaned in protest and belched out a noise that sounded suspiciously like a hiccup.

Then came the smoke.

The fire below, far from being extinguished, puffed up the chimney in a burst of soot that singed Santa’s beard and left his rosy cheeks even rosier. He coughed, waved the smoke from his eyes, and glared at the gadget as though it had betrayed him personally.

“For eight hundred years, not a single problem,” Santa grumbled. “And tonight, of all nights…”

He gave the Jolly Quencher one last whack. It emitted a pitiful doo-wop like a broken toy trumpet. Clearly, it was done.

Santa sighed. “Well, if you want a job done right…”

He turned to the windows.

Sliding down a chimney was second nature, but climbing through a window? That was uncharted territory. Still, Santa was nothing if not resourceful. With a grunt, he hoisted one red-booted leg over the sill, followed by his belly, which, despite decades of careful cookie management, was not particularly well-suited to squeezing through narrow openings.

It was a battle. His belt snagged. His hat fell off and dangled comically over his eyes. At one point, Santa became wedged so tightly that he had to wriggle like a fish caught in a net. Finally, with a loud THUMP, he tumbled onto the living room floor in a pile of soot, snow, and jingle bells.

The crash woke the family’s cat, who arched its back and hissed at the intruder. Santa waved sheepishly. “Ho ho… don’t mind me.”

Gathering himself, he brushed the soot from his coat (which only smeared it further), picked up his hat, and got to work. Despite the fiasco, the gifts were carefully arranged beneath the twinkling tree. Stockings were stuffed. A toy train was placed just so, circling the presents with a cheerful chug-chug-chug.

When all was done, Santa straightened, proud despite the chaos. He had triumphed. Not gracefully, but triumph was triumph.

Climbing back out the window proved no easier than the way in. He knocked over a lamp, sneezed up another puff of soot, and scraped his boot on the sill. But at last, with a grunt and a final shove, he was back on the roof, the night wind cool on his singed cheeks.

Rudolph gave him a look that was half-concern, half-amusement.

“Don’t start,” Santa said, brushing off his coat.

The sleigh was ready. The reindeer stamped impatiently. Santa climbed aboard, gave the reins a tug, and with a mighty leap, they soared into the sky.

Below, the little house glowed warm with Christmas cheer. Above, Santa chuckled to himself, weary, smudged, but undefeated.

“Next year,” he muttered, “I’m upgrading to the Jolly Quencher 4000.”

And with that, he flew off into the night, leaving behind the faint sound of jingling bells and the unmistakable smell of singed beard.