Misotheistic and/or dystheistic expression has a long history in the arts and in literature.
Bernard Schweizer's book
Hating God: The Untold Story of Misotheism is devoted to this topic. He traces the
history of ideas behind misotheism from the
Book of Job, via
Epicureanism and the twilight of Roman
paganism, to
deism,
anarchism,
Nietzschean philosophy,
feminism, and radical
humanism. The main literary figures in his study are
Percy Bysshe Shelley,
Algernon Swinburne,
Zora Neale Hurston,
Rebecca West,
Elie Wiesel,
Peter Shaffer, and
Philip Pullman. Schweizer argues that literature is the preferred medium for the expression of God-hatred because the creative possibilities of literature allow writers to simultaneously unburden themselves of their misotheism while ingeniously veiling their blasphemy. Other examples include: •
Goethe's
Prometheus • the work of the
Marquis de Sade •
Emily Dickinson's poem "Apparently With No Surprise" depicts God as approving of suffering in the world, relating the tale of a flower "beheaded" by a late frost as the sun "measure[s] off another day for an approving God". •
Mark Twain (himself a Deist) argued against what he saw as the petty God many followed in a posthumously published book,
The Bible According to Mark Twain: Writings on Heaven, Eden, and the Flood. He talks, in part, about the African "sleeping sickness",
malaria. •
Ivan Karamazov in
Fyodor Dostoevsky's 1879
The Brothers Karamazov articulates what might be termed a dystheistic rejection of God. Koons covered this argument in the lecture immediately following the one referenced above. It was also discussed by
Peter S. Fosl in his essay titled "The Moral Imperative to Rebel Against God". • Konrad, the protagonist of
Adam Mickiewicz's ''
Forefathers' Eve'', is close to calling the God a
tsar, an ultimate evil (since when Mickiewicz wrote his work, Poland was under Russian occupation). He wants to do that, because God didn't respond to his pleas about giving him the power to rule over people's emotion. He loses his strength, and Satan does it for him. In more recent times, the sentiment is present in a variety of media:
Poetry and drama The characters in several of
Tennessee Williams' plays express dystheistic attitudes, including the Rev. T. Lawrence Shannon in
The Night of the Iguana.
Robert Frost's poem "Design" questions how God could have created death if he were benevolent.
Peter Shaffer's play
Amadeus (1979) has the character
Salieri rebel against a God he feels neglected and humiliated by. In Jewish author
Elie Wiesel's play
The Trial of God (1979), the survivors of a
pogrom, in which most of the inhabitants of a 17th-century Jewish village were massacred, put God on trial for his cruelty and indifference to their misery. The play is based on an actual trial Wiesel participated in that was conducted by inmates of the
Auschwitz concentration camp during the
Nazi holocaust, but it also references a number of other incidents in Jewish history including a similar trial conducted by the
Hasidic Rabbi Levi Yosef Yitzhak of Berdichev: In Alan Parker's Oscar-winning 1980 feature film
Fame, one of the main characters (played by Barry Miller) makes an explicit statement against God. Playing an aspiring stand-up comedian who is asked in an acting class to talk about an experience that has affected him deeply in order to sharpen his skills as a performer, he delivers an extended uncut monologue (rare for a mainstream Hollywood film at that time) that heavily criticizes both modern capitalism and religion, concluding with the line "and then we can all go pray to the asshole God who fucked everything up in the first place".
Modern literature Several non-Jewish authors share Wiesel's concerns about God's nature, including
Salman Rushdie (
The Satanic Verses,
Shalimar the Clown) and
Anne Provoost (
In the Shadow of the Ark): The writing of
Sir Kingsley Amis contains some misotheistic themes; e.g. in
The Green Man (God's appearance as the young man), and in
The Anti-Death League (the anonymous poem received by the chaplain).
Speculative fiction A number of
speculative fiction works present a dystheistic perspective, at least as far back as the works of
H. P. Lovecraft and
Olaf Stapledon's influential philosophical
short novel Star Maker. By the 1970s,
Harlan Ellison even described dystheism as a bit of a
science fiction cliché. Ellison himself has dealt with the theme in his "
The Deathbird", the title story of
Deathbird Stories, a
collection based on the theme of (for the most part) malevolent modern-day gods.
Lester del Rey's "
Evensong" (the first story in Harlan Ellison's much-acclaimed
Dangerous Visions anthology), tells the story of a fugitive God hunted down across the universe by a vengeful humanity which seeks to "put him in his place". "
Faith of Our Fathers" by
Philip K. Dick, also from the same anthology, features a horrifying vision of a being, possibly God, who is all-devouring and amoral.
Philip Pullman's previously mentioned trilogy,
His Dark Materials, presented the theme of a negligent or evil God to a wider audience, as depicted in the 2007 film
The Golden Compass based on the first book of this trilogy. The original series of
Star Trek featured episodes with dystheistic themes, amongst them "
The Squire of Gothos", "
Who Mourns for Adonais?", "
For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky", and "
The Return of the Archons". In "
Encounter at Farpoint", the pilot episode of
Star Trek: The Next Generation, Captain
Jean-Luc Picard informs
Q, a
trickster with god-like powers similar to the antagonist in the aforementioned "Squire of Gothos" episode, that 24th-century humans no longer had any need to depend upon or worship god figures. This is an amplification of the tempered anti-theistic sentiment from "Who Mourns for Adonais?", in which Captain
James T. Kirk tells
Apollo that "Mankind has no need for gods, we find the one quite adequate." A later episode, "
Who Watches the Watchers", depicts accidentally reviving theistic belief in a more primitive species as a negative thing which must be stopped. In
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, it is revealed that the
Klingon creation myth involves the first Klingons killing the gods who created them because "they were more trouble than they were worth." In the film
Pitch Black, anti-hero protagonist Richard B. Riddick stated his own belief after an
imam accuses him of
atheism: "Think someone could spend half their life in a slam with a horse bit in their mouth and not believe? Think he could start out in some liquor store trash bin with an umbilical cord wrapped around his neck and not believe? Got it all wrong, holy man. I absolutely believe in God... and I absolutely hate the fucker."
Robert A. Heinlein's book
Job: A Comedy of Justice, which is mostly about religious institutions, ends with an appearance by Yahweh which is far from complimentary. The Athar, a fictional organization from the
D&D's Planescape Campaign Setting denies the divinity of the setting's deities. They do, however, tend to worship "
The Great Unknown" in their place. In the
Pathfinder universe, the nation of Rahadoum bans the worship of the setting's deities. They do not deny the deities' power or divinity, but instead believe that worshiping a deity is akin to enslaving ones' self and that mortals' problems are best solved without the interference of higher powers. In the 2013 film
Prisoners, Holly Jones and her husband Isaac lost their faith in God after their son died of cancer. Since then, they have been kidnapping and murdering children in order to make other parents lose faith in God and turning them into revenge-driven hollow shells of their former selves, i.e. spreading their misotheism to other people. As Holly Jones states to Keller Dover near the end of the film: "Making children disappear is the war we wage with God. Makes people lose their faith, turns them into demons like you." In the
DC Extended Universe film
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,
Lex Luthor has a misotheistic view of God, believing that if God was omnipotent, then he logically could not be omnibenevolent and vice versa (the theological
problem of evil), thereby solidifying his belief that power cannot be innocent. He has a penchant for constantly implementing allusions to major figures of both pagan and biblical theology, with him notably comparing himself to Prometheus,
General Zod to
Icarus, and
Superman to
Zeus,
Horus,
Apollo,
Jehovah, and
Satan. He even compares himself to the biblical God in one way, claiming to hate "the sin, not the sinner", and plays God by creating the monster
Doomsday. In the
season 1 of
Luke Cage,
Willis Stryker's misotheism seemed to enforce his revenge mission against his half-brother
Luke Cage, quoting several Bible verses that directly link to Lukes's supposed betrayal against Stryker. The Judas Bullet was designed to symbolize this act of treachery; stating "one Judas to another" before shooting Luke in the abdomen and vowing to repeat the same words that
Cain said to his
father after killing
Abel when he finally did kill Cage.
Gorr the God Butcher is a prime example of misotheism in
Marvel Comics. Created by
Jason Aaron and
Esad Ribić in 2013, this character embodies misotheism through his crusade to exterminate all deities in the universe after discovering their indifference to mortal suffering. Gorr's
characterization illustrates how misotheism can arise from the betrayal of religious expectations rather than simple disbelief. The character, portrayed by
Christian Bale, was later adapted in the film
Thor: Love and Thunder (2022), bringing this depiction of misotheism to a wider audience.
Popular music Misotheism is a 2008
album by Belgian
black metal band Gorath. Dystheistic sentiment has also made its way into popular music, evincing itself in controversial songs like "
Dear God" by the band
XTC (later covered by
Sarah McLachlan) and "
Blasphemous Rumours" by
Depeche Mode, which tells the story of a teenage girl who attempted suicide, survived, and turned her life over to God, only to be hit by a car, wind up on life support, and eventually die. A good deal of
Gary Numan's work, specifically the album
Exile, is laden with misotheistic themes. The output of Oscar-winning songwriter/composer
Randy Newman also includes several songs expressing dystheistic sentiment, including the ironic "
He Gives Us All His Love" and the more overtly maltheistic "God's Song (That's Why I Love Mankind)", both from his acclaimed 1972 album
Sail Away. In the latter song, Newman bemoans the futility of dealing with God whose attitude towards humanity he sees as one of contempt and cruelty. The song "God Made" by
Andrew Jackson Jihad proposes dystheism and has an implied hatred for God. More specifically, their song "Be Afraid of Jesus" is about a vengeful Christ although this could be a critique of fundamentalist hate speech. "God Am" by
Alice in Chains from their
self-titled album has many misotheistic themes about the perceived apathy of God towards the evil in this world. "Godwhacker" by
Steely Dan from their
Everything Must Go album developed from a lyric frontman
Donald Fagen wrote a few days after his mother died of Alzheimer's. "It's about an elite squad of assassins whose sole assignment is to find a way into heaven and take out God", he later explained. "If the Deity actually existed, what sane person wouldn't consider this to be justifiable homicide?" In the song "Terrible Lie" by Nine Inch Nails, Trent Reznor expresses anger, confusion, and sadness towards God and the world he created. "Judith" by A Perfect Circle is a satirical song that places blame on God for the illness of the lead singer's mother, Judith. Despite her deteriorating condition, Judith never questions why she has been placed in her predicament but instead continues to praise and worship God. Her son angrily mocks god and presents arguments as to why she shouldn't have to suffer.
Marilyn Manson's "
Fight Song", "
Say10", and others have direct and indirect misotheistic themes. American
death metal bands
Deicide and
Morbid Angel base much of their lyrics around misotheism in name and in concept. Many bands in the
black metal genre, such as
Mayhem,
Emperor,
Gorgoroth and
Darkthrone express extreme misotheism in their lyrics.
Modern art In 2006, Australian artist Archie Moore created a paper sculpture called "Maltheism", which was considered for a
Telstra Art Award in 2006. The piece was intended as a representation of a church made from pages of the
Book of Deuteronomy: ==See also==