Josa is wrong about the line "what god became, you wanted it."
The lyrics are:
The plans you made, you wanted it
The bitter taste, you wanted it
What god became, you wanted it
But the one thing you need, you'll never get
These lines are about control. The idea that God "changed" when Jesus came isn't biblical. What the lyrics are saying is that in an attempt to control his own world, which is what the song is about, he has constructed a new image of God (what god became) in which God requires this perfection of him. He craves control of his own world because he feels that he needs to earn God's love, so he reshaped his image of God to be one that is demanding and judgemental. We crave conditional grace instead of God's true unconditional grace and love because it makes more sense to us and we feel safe when we have control like that (what god became, you wanted it), but we can't deserve conditional grace, so it leaves unsatisfied (the one thing you need you'll never get).
Josa is wrong about the line "what god became, you wanted it."
The lyrics are: The plans you made, you wanted it The bitter taste, you wanted it What god became, you wanted it But the one thing you need, you'll never get
These lines are about control. The idea that God "changed" when Jesus came isn't biblical. What the lyrics are saying is that in an attempt to control his own world, which is what the song is about, he has constructed a new image of God (what god became) in which God requires this perfection of him. He craves control of his own world because he feels that he needs to earn God's love, so he reshaped his image of God to be one that is demanding and judgemental. We crave conditional grace instead of God's true unconditional grace and love because it makes more sense to us and we feel safe when we have control like that (what god became, you wanted it), but we can't deserve conditional grace, so it leaves unsatisfied (the one thing you need you'll never get).