Why this word is great
RECREATIONISM — [Noun] The philosophical or theological doctrine that the cosmos is not merely sustained, but instantaneously annihilated and recreated by divine will at every successive moment of time. From the English word 'recreation' (in the sense of creating again, from Latin 're-' ("again") and 'creatio' ("creation")) + the suffix '-ism' (denoting a system, principle, or doctrine). Unlike the broader theological concept of "continuous creation," which suggests a flowing, ongoing sustainment, or the popular pursuit of "historical reenactment," which consciously mimics a static past, recreationism posits a universe of radical discontinuity. It is the filmstrip burning in the projector's gate and an identical, pristine frame snapping instantly into its place; it is the impossible sensation of a river where no water molecule ever passes the same point twice; it is the flickering persistence of a candle flame that is, in truth, a rapid series of distinct, newborn fires—a metaphysics where all persistence is a divine forgery, stitched into being moment by precarious moment.