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Dheeraj Kumar is a writer and storyteller from India. The God I Had to Become is his debut book, written with honesty and a deep interest in understanding life, faith, and personal truth. He believes writing is a way to explore questions we often carry but rarely speak aloud. Through this book, Dheeraj hopes to connect with readers who are searching for meaning beyond what they were taught, and to remind them that it’s okay to find their path.Read More...
Dheeraj Kumar is a writer and storyteller from India. The God I Had to Become is his debut book, written with honesty and a deep interest in understanding life, faith, and personal truth. He believes writing is a way to explore questions we often carry but rarely speak aloud. Through this book, Dheeraj hopes to connect with readers who are searching for meaning beyond what they were taught, and to remind them that it’s okay to find their path.
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We are taught that God watches, judges, and decides who deserves reward or punishment.
We are told that morality comes from heaven, that meaning descends from above.
This book asks a simpler, more dangerous question:
What if none of that is true?
The God I Had to Become is not a rejection of belief—it is an autopsy of it.
A relentless examination of why gods look human, speak our languages, share our fears, and inherit our
We are taught that God watches, judges, and decides who deserves reward or punishment.
We are told that morality comes from heaven, that meaning descends from above.
This book asks a simpler, more dangerous question:
What if none of that is true?
The God I Had to Become is not a rejection of belief—it is an autopsy of it.
A relentless examination of why gods look human, speak our languages, share our fears, and inherit our violence.
Why prayer changes nothing that human action does not.
Why faith comforts, but responsibility terrifies.
This book argues that the greatest lie was not God himself—but the idea that goodness, justice, and compassion must come from somewhere else.
When the illusion collapses, something heavier replaces it: accountability.
There is no divine judge waiting. No cosmic ledger. No salvation promised from above.
There is only what we choose to become.
This is not a book about losing God.
It is about inheriting everything we once gave away.
The only god worth believing in is the one we become together.
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