
It is rather amusing when one reflects upon it: God created human beings in diverse forms—some with fair skin, others brown, tan, or black; some born in Asia, Europe, or Africa—and endowed them with reason and the noble purpose of worshiping Him. Yet see what has become of it: behind their solemn prayers and hymns declaring “God is with us” or “God loves us,” lie tongues that do not hesitate to demean His very creation. They mock skin color, deride body shape, belittle other nations, as though God fashioned only a select few as masterpieces while the rest were mere objects of ridicule. How ironic is that? God could never be racist toward His own creation.
Indeed, if one truly believes that God is the Creator, then is not every insult directed at His creatures essentially an insult to the Creator Himself? Who would dare spit in the face of an artist while ridiculing his painting before his very eyes? And what of those who unknowingly do the same to God—mocking His handiwork while professing love for Him?
Perhaps, if God were to reveal His face before humankind, those who delight in belittling His creation would realize that their jeers never vanished into the air but landed squarely upon the very face of the Creator they claim to worship. And only then would they come to recognize the depth of their hypocrisy: praising God with their lips while degrading the work of His hands with their actions. Tragic indeed, yet this is the true face of humanity—often more eager to worship God with words while insulting Him through deeds.
Human diversity has a divine purpose. Skin color, language, ethnicity, nation—all are part of God’s design so that humankind may know one another, learn, and cultivate respect, rather than disdain. Difference is not a defect but a sign of divine wisdom. If all humanity were uniform, the world would be impoverished of color, experience, and wisdom. In other words, racism is nothing less than a denial of God’s wisdom in creating diversity.
No sacred text ever declares that those with dark skin, slanted eyes, or certain facial features were created to be objects of mockery. Every human being is part of the perfection of God’s will. God beholds His creation as perfect.
God: “Behold My work—perfect and beautiful!”
Man: “Ugh, hideous! Look how black that person is—almost like the bottom of a scorched frying pan! Hahaha!”
God: “😤😤😤”
It is worth remembering that God’s standard differs from that of human beings. We, in our imperfection, often judge by appearance—skin, face, wealth, or status—whereas God judges by the heart and by piety. True perfection lies not in outward form but in inner disposition. The most exalted are not the fairest, the most handsome, the most beautiful, or the wealthiest, but the most devout and pure of heart. Every insult rooted in race, physique, or ethnicity only reveals how far the mocker has strayed from piety.
Speaking of contempt and discrimination, there is yet another social issue often misconstrued: immigration. Many conflate criticism of immigration policies with racism toward immigrants themselves. Yet the two are distinct. To oppose or critique mass immigration policies does not mean rejecting the immigrants as people, let alone disparaging their dignity. Personally, I am someone who does not favor mass immigration. Thus, when I share posts where people protest against immigration, my concern is directed toward the policy itself—its structural impact on economics, culture, security, social integration, and sustainability in a country should mass immigration be implemented.
I am highly critical of the scale or patterns of mass immigration policies, which I believe can give rise to social, cultural, or economic challenges. Therefore, my stance here is clear: I separate the individuals (immigrants as fellow human beings) from the policy (mass immigration as a system with potential socio-political consequences), which is only natural to debate and evaluate critically.
- People profess devotion to God yet simultaneously demean other human beings based on appearance or race.
- This contradiction is deeply ironic because worship and contempt coexist in the same hearts.
- Mocking God’s creatures is framed as equivalent to insulting God Himself, since creation reflects the Creator.
- Those who deride others are compared to someone ridiculing an artist’s painting in front of the artist.
- If God revealed Himself, mockers would see their insults land upon the Creator, exposing their hypocrisy.
- Praising God with words while denigrating His works with actions is identified as moral and spiritual inconsistency.
- Skin color, language, ethnicity, and nationality are described as intentional aspects of God’s design for mutual recognition and learning.
- Diversity is praised as wisdom, not defect; racism is defined as denial of God’s creative wisdom.
- God judges by heart and piety rather than outward appearance; true worth lies in devotion and moral character.
- Critique of immigration policy is distinguished from hatred toward immigrants as people; policy critique is political, not a moral attack on individuals.
- The author personally opposes mass immigration on social, cultural, economic, and security grounds while insisting on preserving immigrants’ dignity.
- The stance separates evaluation of systemic effects from respect for immigrants as fellow human beings.
Irony of Worship vs. Racism
Insulting Creation = Insulting the Creator
Hypocrisy Exposed
Divine Purpose of Diversity
Immigration vs. Human Dignity