Board Thread:Speculation House/@comment-36285558-20190202212117/@comment-25110963-20190212185651

The Devil&#039;s Advocate WP wrote: I suspect, in the end, she will learn her lesson about the value of life and death. As I said elsewhere, the GoL could have sent Oz back as an immortal or in the same body, but instead Oz came back facing mirror images that were not his own and finds himself leaping from life to life, hoping to put right what once went wrong. Living out so many lives and being caught up in them as he was, Oz has a unique perspective on the whole matter. He is immortal in a sense, like Salem, yet he has also experienced death many times in many lives from many perspectives. Oz is also, in the end, Salem's great love and so understands her on a personal level. My supposition is the GoL figured he would not be able to succeed in his first life or in many others, but that over time he would develop the perspective and wisdom necessary to get through to Salem as only he could ever manage. Ozma isn't immortal by any stretch because he died and lived so many times. I think Salem put it best that their souls can transcend death. To transcend death is something, but the understanding and perspective is what separates Ozma and Salem. You could very well be right with the Light God's intention, yet at the same time he likely made room for error in case such a plan failed. One thing I don't get is what the God of Darkness gets out of a world that proves itself worthy. He cared to a degree to have reverence and respect, but he could also purge the world again if he wanted. What does he get out of it if the world remains. I would think he gains more if Remnant goes. We are missing something here.