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You are here: Blog / Daily Journal / TO KILL GOD - THE LAST HARVEST

TO KILL GOD - THE LAST HARVEST

Feb 4, 2026

TO KILL GOD - THE LAST HARVEST

I AM GOING TO KILL GOD! HE IS A LIAR AND A GREAT DECEIVER

Chapter 1: 1989



That was the year the world ended for me and her.

The official reports called it natural causes. Heart failure, they said. A glitch in the machinery. I watched the coroners write it down in their little reports with their cheap, clicking pens, and I wanted to vomit. There was nothing natural about the way she looked.

I’d gone to work like every other pathetic, ordinary day. I pushed papers, drank stale coffee, and counted the minutes until I could see her. I came back and found her on the floor. She wasn't just dead; she was harvested.

Her body was bent into a tight, sickening U-shape, spine snapped in the center, head tucked to her chest like a lamb prepared for a sacrifice. It was a message written in bone. She was a woman who had spent her life looking for the truth, and she finally found it. She realized the "Word" they preach in the cathedrals and the temples was a lie, a chain to keep us still while the butcher sharpened his blade.

The evidence of the crime lead to one who calls himself “GOD.” A coward who hides behind words. A parasite who demands worship as payment for the air he lets us breathe—until he decides he’s hungry.

I didn't need a priest; I needed a trail. And I found it. The bastard is sloppy because he’s never been hunted before. He thinks he’s the architect. He thinks the walls he built are high enough to keep out the light. He’s wrong.

 

 

Chapter 2: The Stench of a Savior

 

In my quest to slay the Killer, I learned that he is also a liar, a deceiver, with many names. He’s the ultimate con man, wearing the faces of mercy to mask the smell of the slaughterhouse.

In one town, he called himself Jesus. In another, he called himself Yahweh. I followed the stench of him across the country, into every city where they told stories of a "savior" who died for our sins—as if we needed saving from anything other than him.

In thousands and thousands of years, this cowardly killer made sure his harvest was ripe. I saw it in the eyes of the "faithful"—a slow death that you don't notice until the end. Where his name is whispered each day is a graveyard in waiting. That whisper is the sound of a sheep being led to the pen. He left a trail of bent-backed corpses in the village squares, in the high-rises, and in every place where his name is known or whispered in the guise of help.

In a freezing mountain pass in the East, he’d gone by Yahweh, taking the firstborns and leaving that same U-shaped signature in the dirt. The names changed like cheap suits. Allah. Brahma. The Father.

Every time I got close, I found the same thing: a pile of bodies and a town full of people too terrified to admit they’d seen a monster. They called it "divine will." I called it a spree.

 

Chapter 3: The Pruning

 

I started digging into the old books—not the ones they give you in Sunday school, but the ones written in blood on stone.

He’s been doing this for eons. He’s not a creator. He’s a parasite that’s been pruning the garden since the first spark of fire. He doesn't want us to grow; he wants us to stay soft and sweet for the killing. He kills the ones who see him clearly. He killed my wife because she looked past the light and saw the teeth.

She saw that the "Word" was the first lie ever told. It wasn't "In the beginning was the Word." In the beginning was the Hunger.

I am not a holy man. I am the man who came home to find his wife turned into a sigil. I am the one who knows that if you can name a thing, you can track it. And if you can track it, you can kill it.

He’s had eons to practice his lies. I’ve had since 1989 to sharpen my hate. The harvest is over. I'm coming for the Harvester.


Chapter  4: 
The Bar Called Heaven

Who survives the wrath of a bloodthirsty, narcissistic God? Who can, really? Who can truly stand when the deceiver of the universe decides to turn the world into a slaughterhouse? When he finally quenches that infinite, jagged thirst, there is nothing left but despair and rows of mindless sheep bleating as they trot toward the blade.

Ask the people of Aijipt, Kamora, and the city of Athelhem. When God was done with them, there was nothing left, only a husk of a nation rotting under a sky that offered no mercy. I knew a town once. A peaceful place of plenty, where the soil was rich and the laughter of children, men, and women filled the air. Then God entered. Now, those faces are gone, replaced by hollow men wandering through the ruins of their own lives.

I heard the full story in a bar called Heaven, tucked away on the corner of Eden and Eve. It was a dive that smelled of stale sweat and old blood. Heaven was left in pieces and dust, unrecognised from the old famous bar that made men and women happy. A man sat there, draining the last of his glass. When he looked at me, his face wasn't human anymore. It was a map of pure, unadulterated horror, a reflection of a man who had seen the horror lived under a mad dictator.

Nursing a glass like it was the only thing keeping his soul from leaking onto the floor. He started babbling, a broken record repeating the same line: "A fool in his heart will say there’s no God." He said it three times. Each time, his voice got thinner, hollower. He had that dead-eyed look of someone whose brain had been scooped out and replaced with ash. He claimed he didn't know why he said it, just that it "stuck" with him.

The coward was lying. I knew those words. Those are the words the killer spits into the ears of his victims while he opens them up.

This "God" isn’t some untouchable deity. He’s a sloppy, reckless animal. One night, he got so drunk on his own filth and the high of the kill that he reached for a mortal blade instead of a miracle. He stabbed a man nine times, certain he’d finished the job, certain the dirt would hide his work. But he’s getting weak. He’s getting slow. The man lived. He felt the cold bite of the steel and he saw the face of the "Almighty" shaking with the frantic, sweaty nerves of a common murderer.

What I suspected was true all along after hearing this story. I’m not looking for a deity of great power and wisdom. No, this is a man who got a taste of power and now it's driving him mad.



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About the Author

Disclaimer. I use the blog as a daily journal. I relate some topics from my books and some are completely off depending on what fresh surprise the universe put in my path. Every day is a chance to improve and change my mind, and so go my ideas and beliefs. I am Rorisang Maimane. One day, I intend to rule the galaxy. I have been called an author, and business owner philanthropist.

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Rorisang Maimane

is a writer. He’s the bestselling author of Embrace Change and other books. Read more→

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