CREATION
The alarm was very loud, He reached out and put it off without making an effort to wake up. However, this was the day, the beginning of making everything now.GOD sat upright. This wasn't a day for lazing about in bed. Today was the day to start creating his ideas. He swung His legs out of bed and felt for His slippers. It was dark and cold in the mornings and He would have to do something about it, maybe make a large ball of fire to provide warmth and light for His creation. So He said LET THERE BE LIGHT, and there was light. He made His way down the stairs guided by the sweet aroma of bacon and pork sausages. Gorgeous that, you could spend your life eating nothing else. It could become quite a vice. He frowned. He’d have to put a stop to that.
“I need a solid stone base for my creation,” explained God. “Level but with rough bits to make it more exciting and absorbing.”Pluto believed he could handle that. In short, he was quite excited by the idea. It would put him in a position to try out some experiments he’d been on with his friend Vulcan. “Nothing to worry about. I should get that done in a few days, I’d think.”God had a grin as He left for His workshop. Pluto could be believed to turn out a good solid basis for His creation. But first He would have to create a place for it, a space. God thought up a blackboard and chalk. Looking at the piece of chalk, an idea struck Him. Wouldn't it be fun to make chalk from the bodies and skeletons of long-dead creatures. That was for later though, He had to make somewhere for them to live first.
His place would have to be empty space but that didn't mean that it couldn't have something in it. It would have to be governed by laws, (God like Law). There would have to be little laws for little things and big ones for bigger things but all would have to be related and depend on one universal law to bind them together. He would call it the Universal Law. He thought a little more and then decided to call it the Universal Law of Relativity. He liked that – a bit more subtle. God’s brain wasn't quite as good as Einstein’s but His maths was better. He soon had the blackboard covered in complex equations and obscure symbols. By dinner time He had a satisfactory collection of laws to cover every kind of matter that He chose to make. He stood back and contemplated at the board. A little adjustment here or there but He had a good design for creations as you could make. He’d get it up and running in the morning and He could always make adjustments to the system later.
“Ah, I thought you’d notice them,” admitted Pluto. “They’re volcanoes. It’s an idea that my friend Vulcan has been working on. You could use them to impose a sense of your power on everybody. You know ‘fall down and worship me, or you get obliterated’ kind of thing.”
God rather liked that idea but He wasn’t about to let Pluto get one over on Him. “No, no, no, I’m a god of forgiveness and compassion. Not like you lot of blood-thirsty warmongers. I don’t mind having the volcanoes but they have to be fitful, not all the time.” He was thinking of the problems continuous light had caused.
“OK,” said Pluto. “I’ll work on something and should have it ready by lunchtime. I’ll bring it round then.”
True to his word, Pluto arrived just before lunch with a big box tucked under his arm. He opened it up and laid the contents out on the workbench. “It’s much the same as before but I’ve put in something extra, completely free of charge,” he added quickly. “its water and that big bit there is the sea. I hope You like it. Relieves the mono…..the plainness, don’t you think?”
God knew exactly what Pluto was getting at but He chose to be critical. “OK, but I see the volcanoes aren’t working now. Is that permanent?”
“Oh, no!” Pluto grew quite excited. “I’ve installed an On/Off switch. You can turn them on and off whenever You like. Give people a fright, so to speak, or impress them with Your magnanimity by saving the faithful just before they’re overtaken by the flood of hot, molten dust – pyroclastic flow, my friend Vulcan tells me.”
God was pleased. Altogether it was much more imaginative than His basic idea. He also felt He could knock down the price by claiming that the added extras, the volcanoes and seas, were not part of the original commission. “Well, let’s get it outside and see how it looks in Space*.”
It did look very good. Little rivers were weaving through the big mountains and, here and there, the volcanoes twinkled as He turned them on. But it was still stark and grey, hardly a work of art or even slightly hospitable. What could He do to make it more attractive? Then He remembered his wife’s carpet. He had ordered a new one for the living room and some brightly colored rugs for the kitchen – easier to keep clean, He had assured her. Wouldn’t it be good if His place had a carpet, a pretty green one (green was God’s favorite color) but with splashes of red and yellow and blue all over it. It would have to be one that didn’t wear out though. He couldn’t afford to replace it every millennia.
God thought about His problem for a long time after Pluto had left. His carpet would have to be self-replicating somehow, able to replace bits of itself as they wore out. He could make lots of different things but all would have a pattern which could be passed on to make copies of themselves. He worked on His idea for the rest of the afternoon until He was ready.
The stone base was now covered by a beautiful green carpet. Grasses swayed in the breeze, perfume wafted from banks of herbs, trees grew tall and stately by the rivers.** God** watched delightedly for some time as pods popped their seeds over the ground and wispy feathers carried their seeds away in the wind. “Beats having to buy a new carpet,” He thought as He walked home. His wife eyed Him suspiciously as He carefully wiped the mud off His boots on the doormat. Looking at the mud on the floor,** He** thought, “I think I’ll call my creation Earth. That’ll annoy her.”
On the fourth day God decided He had better get down to the light problem. He needed a big ball of fire to light the Earth but it shouldn’t shine all the time. Could He have an ON/OFF switch like the volcanoes? Then** He** had a wonderful idea, His big ball of fire would travel across the sky during the day giving light and warmth evenly to everything below but, at night, it would return under the Earth to come up on the other side in the morning.
Then He thought about the night. It would be too dark all the time and people would always be stubbing their toes on gazunders. He would have to make a light which wouldn’t disturb everybody’s sleep. He also thought about Vulcan’s volcanoes twinkling; they looked very pretty in the darkness. It would be lovely to have lots of little sparkling lights in the sky at night.
The fifth day began with a minor disaster. God’s wife presented Him with a bowl of something very strange for breakfast. “Well, you’ve banned the bacon and sausages,” she said defensively. “So I thought I’d try some of Your grasses, herbs of the field and fruits of the trees and such like. I’m going to call it muesli.”
God stared at His breakfast. It looked like sick. He tried to eat it but it tasted of sawdust even when He mixed some of the new water with it to help it go down and it lay on His stomach like a lump of clay. He could see His wife had red rims round her eyes. He hated it when she cried. If she did then He would give up the whole enterprise and go back to being one of the lesser gods.
Thankfully she didn’t. She just sniffed and took the bowl away. “*Well, if You don’t like being a vegetarian, You had better invent some kind of meat that is acceptable and not too delicious. Something a bit cold and slippery. With a strong smell,” she added as an afterthought. During the day God thought about what His wife had said. A food that was nutritious but not too tasty. He drew lots of different designs on His board. They were very basic and some looked like they’d been drawn by a child of four. Some were just blobs and mostly they only had bodies, no arms or legs. God had to admit to Himself that, although He was quite good at creation, He couldn’t draw like Michael angelo. He would try them out anyway and by tomorrow He was confident He’d be ready for His Big Creation. He went down to the Earth and stood beside the sea. His new creatures would have to live there as they didn’t have any legs to walk on. Huge breakers were crashing on to the headland but little wavelets were soughing gently on the pebbles at His feet. This would make a very safe, cosy environment for His first creatures.
Breakfast the next day was a great deal better. God’s wife had fried up some of the fish with birds’ eggs. But it was a bit smelly. He could see her wrinkling her nose and, to forestall what was coming, He said, “That was very good indeed. Tomorrow why don’t you try making an omelette with some eggs and I’ll see if I can invent something nice and creamy to go in it.”
God’s wife was happy with that idea but she wasn’t done nagging Him. “Before You go rushing off to that shed of Yours, it’s time You did some work in the garden. You can’t see the dahlias for weeds and the lawn is like a jungle.”
Grumpily God mowed the lawn and weeded the flower beds. Normally He enjoyed gardening but not when He was busy with the big project. Maybe He should try and get hold of a gardener. Ceres might like the extra cash. For the time being, though, He’d have to do it Himself to keep the wife happy. God whistled to Himself as He went off to work. His wife had been so pleased that she hadn’t mentioned mud on the floor or new curtains to go with the new carpet.
The first human yawned, stretched and looked about. The other human put her hand into his and smiled. They didn’t seem terribly interested in what God had to say but He gave them strict instructions about their powers and duties, spanked them playfully on their bottoms, and sent them off to populate the Earth. God was tired after all this creation work but He thought His wife would like to see what He had been up to. After dinner He brought her down to the Earth. He showed her all the colourful flowers, the sparkling fishes and feathery birds. She admired the cows a lot and was especially delighted with His female human as He had hoped. They sat on the beach enjoying the warmth of the last rays of the setting sun. He put His arm round her and she rested her head on His shoulder. It was all very good.'
source
God had a long lie-in next morning. He read the morning papers and thought how nice it was to have finished all His work and have a whole day off. “I think this should be a special day of rest for everybody,” He told His wife. “I shall call it the Sabbath and, forever after, all good people who follow me will have Saturday off.”