Gnostic Christians believe the god of the bible is an evil god and that there is some kind of battle going on to oust him. They believe that it requires people to come to know the truth and reach a state of knowing to overcome this evil god. At least that's my preliminary understanding.
I personally believe that all conscious deities are manmade creations.
However, I believe there is something to the pagan idea that spirit resides in everything. Certainly in animals, and even plants. I believe there is also spiritual power in what we call inanimate objects (like stones, crystals, etc).
Precisely how that power is animated I have no clue, but I believe that the art of witchcraft holds the keys to interacting and tranforming that power.
As far as a 'biblical God' is concerned I don't believe there is such a thing (good or evil). I believe the entire mythology is just that. A manmade story that has no divine being behind it other than the very spirits of the men who made it up.
In fact, when I look at the pantheon of witchcraft I see that pantheon as being entirely a construction of man.
That doesn't invalid its usefulness or purpose. The imagined deities of the Goddesses and Gods as well as the elemental spirits are pragmatically useful. They don't need to be real desties in their own right because we make them real in our own minds.
What is more important is that via that imagery we are able to transform the spiritual energy that consituties this physical world.
There are no deities who are responsible for this. We are fully responsible for it. We actually become the deities by visualizing them psychically.
It truly is about getting in touch with our higher-self.
But the only way to justify the divinity of the higher self is to accept Jeanniebean's insistence that all higher selves are indeed responsible for everything they experience.
That utlimately must be the truth.
Otherwise there would be no justification for divinity.
It's just so hard to believe in from a practical point of view.
It almost seems like grasping at straws just as a way of avoid having to face the dark dragon of atheism.
But I must confess, it is a straw that is graspable. I mean, it would constitute justification if everyone is ulimately responsible for everything that happens to them. That would be total justification.
No one could complain because nothing could happen to them that they truly wouldn't permit.
The only thing that makes it so hard to swallow is that it kind of hardens a person off to feeling sorry for anyone if this is true. I mean, no matter what happens to someone you can just shrug your shoulders and say, "Well, clearly you aren't all that worried about it or you wouldn't allow it to be happening."
Now we get into a case of reverse-heartlessness.
In order to justify divinity we need to recognize that there's no real reason to feel sorry for anyone.
It's true.