I pray you can make it better down here
I don't mean a big reduction in the price of beer
But all the people that you made in your image
See them starving on their feet
'Cause they don't get enough to eat from God
I can't believe in you
Dear God, sorry to disturb you, but
I feel that I should be heard loud and clear
We all need a big reduction in amount of tears
And all the people that you made in your image
See them fighting in the street
'Cause they can't make opinions meet about God
I can't believe in you
Did you make disease, and the diamond blue?
Did you make mankind after we made you?
And the devil too
Dear God, don't know if you noticed, but
Your name is on a lot of quotes in this book
Us crazy humans wrote it, you should take a look
And all the people that you made in your image
Still believing that junk is true
Well I know it ain't and so do you, dear God
I can't believe in
I don't believe in
I won't believe in heaven and hell
No saints, no sinners, no devil as well
No pearly gates, no thorny crown
You're always letting us humans down
The wars you bring, the babes you drown
Those lost at sea and never found
And it's the same the whole world 'round
The hurt I see helps to compound
The Father, Son and Holy Ghost
Is just somebody's unholy hoax
And if you're up there you'll perceive
That my heart's here upon my sleeve
If there's one thing I don't believe in
It's you
Dear God

XTC were an English rock band formed in Swindon in 1972. Fronted by songwriters Andy Partridge (vocals, guitars) and Colin Moulding (vocals, bass), the band gained popularity during the rise of punk and new wave in the 1970s, later playing in a variety of styles that ranged from angular guitar riffs to elaborately arranged pop. Partly because the group did not fit into contemporary trends, they achieved only sporadic commercial success in the UK and US, but attracted a considerable cult following. They have since been recognised for their influence on post-punk, Britpop and later power pop acts.
Partridge and Moulding first met in the early 1970s and subsequently formed a glam outfit with drummer Terry Chambers. The band's name and line-up changed frequently, and it was not until 1975 that the band was known as XTC. In 1977, the group debuted on Virgin Records and were subsequently noted for their energetic live performances and their refusal to play conventional punk rock, instead synthesising influences from ska, 1960s pop, dub music and avant-garde. The single "Making Plans for Nigel" (1979) marked their commercial breakthrough and heralded the reverberating drum sound associated with 1980s popular music.
Between 1979 and 1992, XTC had a total of 10 albums and 6 singles that reached the UK top 40, including "Sgt. Rock (Is Going to Help Me)" (1980) and "Senses Working Overtime" (1982). After 1982's English Settlement, the band stopped concert touring and became a studio-based project centred on Partridge, Moulding and guitarist Dave Gregory. A spin-off group, the Dukes of Stratosphear, was invented as a one-off excursion into 1960s-style psychedelia, but as XTC's music evolved, the distinctions between the two bands lessened. XTC continued to produce more progressive records, including the albums Skylarking (1986), Oranges & Lemons (1989) and Nonsuch (1992). In the US, "Mayor of Simpleton" (1989) was their highest-charting single, while "Dear God" (1986) was controversial for its anti-religious message.
Due to poor management, XTC never received a share of profits from record sales (of which there were millions), nor from touring revenue, forcing them into debt throughout the 1980s and 1990s. In 1993, they went on strike against Virgin, citing an unfair recording contract, and soon extricated themselves from the label. Gregory left the band during the making of Apple Venus Volume 1 (1999), after which the XTC name was used by the duo of Partridge and Moulding. In 2006, Partridge announced that his creative partnership with Moulding had disintegrated, leaving XTC "in the past tense". Moulding and Chambers briefly reunited as the duo TC&I in the late 2010s. Partridge and Gregory remain musically active.
einsteinstoe wrote:
I respect your views and hope you are right.
But, look at it from a non-believer's point of view: If this is it, then we need to do everything we can to minimize the pain and suffering in this life. We must act on our own and together and not hope that somewhere out there is something that will take care of it for us. It's in our hands, not his.
This is NOT just a place to "wipe your feet" before going on to other "nice places."
Dear God - fuck you and your supreme court shills…
WELL STATED!! ...and, getting worse by the minute!
XTC didn't like the sound engineering of Skylarking (amongst other things about the recording!) and they eventually found the issue and re-released it titled the 'corrected polarity' version. Check it out if you like the album - i was surprised at the difference in sound quality and depth.
"Pink Thing" would be a fun place to start.
My thoughts exactly.
They have a wealth of amazing songs.
The radio hits are the weakest, IMHO.
Not to mention you get to avoid all that disappointment when your dead
This is completely wrong. I don't think you 'understand' the Michaelson-Morley experiment.
Yes, I agree. I think there is much more to life than current science can offer us. And many of us need a little belief in something to help get through the day.
What bugs me is things like pretending you (meaning a general "you", not anyone here in particular) know God's thoughts and wishes. Or that your belief is better than mine. Or that God needs money. Or when your beliefs contradict science and you persecute those who are telling the truth ala Copernicus, Galileo, etc. Or when your belief compels you to pass laws about what a woman can and cannot do with her own body. I think part of the debate is about these overstepping of boundaries, not so much faith/belief itself, which I think is part of the human condition.
I rated this one '10', which Bill refers to as "Godlike."
Works for me! ...should be followed by "If God was one of us" by Joan Osborne!