There is a pattern that repeats across every spiritual tradition humanity has ever produced. It appears in Hinduism as the Trimurti. It appears in Christianity as the Trinity. It appears in Egyptian mythology as the Osirian triad. It appears in Taoism as the interplay of yin, yang, and the Tao. It appears in Norse mythology as the three roots of Yggdrasil. It appears in alchemy as sulfur, mercury, and salt. It appears in physics as energy, matter, and entropy. The pattern is always three. And the three always describe the same process.
The G.O.D. Algorithm is not a belief system. It is an observation. When you study enough traditions — not casually, not through secondary sources, but through the actual primary texts in their original context — you begin to see a triadic engine at the core of every cosmology ever constructed. Generation: the force that creates, initiates, and brings forth from nothing. Operation: the force that sustains, maintains, preserves, and holds reality in form. Dissolution: the force that destroys, transforms, recycles, and returns everything to the source so that Generation can begin again. This is not metaphor. This is the architecture of reality itself, described independently by civilizations that had no contact with one another.
In Hinduism, the three supreme aspects of Brahman — the absolute, infinite, formless ground of all being — manifest as Brahma the Creator (Generation), Vishnu the Preserver (Operation), and Shiva the Destroyer (Dissolution). This is the Trimurti, literally meaning 'three forms.' Brahma speaks the universe into existence through sacred sound — the primordial AUM. Vishnu maintains cosmic order (dharma) through his avatars, descending into form whenever balance is threatened. Shiva dances the Tandava, the cosmic dance of destruction that is simultaneously the dance of creation, because nothing new can be born without the dissolution of the old. The Shaivites understood something most Western minds miss entirely: destruction is not the opposite of creation. It is creation's prerequisite.
The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit map directly onto the G.O.D. Algorithm — but centuries of theological politics have obscured this. The Father is the generative principle: the uncaused cause, the source from which all emanates. 'In the beginning, God created' — Generation. The Son is the operative principle: the Logos, the Word made flesh, the sustaining intelligence that holds reality in coherent form. 'All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made' (John 1:3) — Operation. The Holy Spirit is the transformative, dissolving principle: the force that moves, that renews, that breaks old forms so new ones can emerge. 'And I will put a new spirit within you; and I will take the stony heart out of your flesh' (Ezekiel 36:26) — Dissolution. The early Church Fathers at the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD were not inventing this structure. They were encoding a pattern far older than Christianity itself.
The question is not whether this pattern exists. The pattern is self-evident to anyone who reads the primary texts. The question is: why does it exist? Why would cultures separated by oceans, millennia, and language barriers independently arrive at the same triadic structure? There are only two possible answers. Either human beings share a cognitive architecture that naturally produces trinitarian models — which is itself a profound statement about the nature of consciousness — or they are all observing the same underlying reality and describing it through different cultural lenses. In either case, the conclusion is the same: there is a unified structure beneath all theology. The G.O.D. Algorithm is that structure.
This course will systematically dismantle every literalist interpretation of scripture you have ever held. If your faith depends on surface readings, you will be challenged. But what emerges on the other side is not less faith — it is more. It is faith grounded not in one book, but in the unified testimony of all human spiritual experience.