It really does seem that Akerfeldt is looking at the evil done by people in this world and shouting, "Isn't the Creator responsible for what he has created?"
But I also see Akerfeldt's indictment of God more as a poetic device than an actual complaint against a deity he believes to exist: "This failure (man himself with all this shortcomings) has made the Creator rather than the Creator making Man.
In keeping with jonas87:
It really does seem that Akerfeldt is looking at the evil done by people in this world and shouting, "Isn't the Creator responsible for what he has created?"
But I also see Akerfeldt's indictment of God more as a poetic device than an actual complaint against a deity he believes to exist: "This failure (man himself with all this shortcomings) has made the Creator rather than the Creator making Man.
An excellent musical composition.