Who is God to take you away from me? I wonder, does your God love you as much as I do? Do you love your God more than me? No, impossible. You don't look nearly as enraptured kneeling before the altar in prayer as when you are on your knees before me. You say your heart is filled with nothing but God's grace, but I recall you enjoying being filled by other things that would be sinful in His eyes. There is not a place in your heart, your soul, or your body that I have not touched, my beloved. I claim them, every part of you that you will allow me.
I challenge God for your devotion. Maybe that makes me a devil, but I care not. Worship something more tangible than Him, the way I worship you, mon ange, ma déesse.
I don't need to be showered in riches and money, in incredibly expensive jewelry, bags and clothes. In fact, I don't need all his paycheck spent on frivolous things.
Sure, money is important and what girl doesn't love a shiny bracelet or a pretty necklace, but give me the most soft of touches, take out of me the most genuine laugh; the loud ugly one, the truthful one. Hold me when my world crumbls and stand by my side when I am on top of the mountain. Be my sun, my moon and everything else in between.
In Revelations 22:13, God says “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.”. What’s interesting is that while it mostly a translation of the original Greek: (“ἐγὼ τὸ Ἄλφα καὶ τὸ Ὦ, ὁ πρῶτος καὶ ὁ ἔσχατος, ἡ ἀρχὴ καὶ τὸ τέλος.") the words Alpha and Omega are direct borrowings. It doesn’t really make any sense in English until you learn that they are the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet.
So in Modern English, a truer translation is “I am A and the Zee”, which sounds kind of funny (Greek had better letter names).
But in Early Modern English, the symbol “&” (derived from a cursive “et”) was considered its own final letter, named “and per se and” (”and as itself”). So by around the 1850s, the better translation would be “I am the A and the Ampersand”, which is horrible but amazing.