English edit

Etymology edit

From the traditional Biblical notions of a masculine God and a Heaven located above the Earth.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Proper noun edit

the Man Upstairs

  1. (slang, humorous) God.
    • 1972, Harold Edward Fey, The Christian Century Reader:
      A rhapsodic inquiry greets us from the TV screen and the radio: "Have you talked to the Man Upstairs?" God is a friendly neighbor who dwells in the apartment just above. Call on him any time, especially if you are feeling a little blue.
    • 2000, Lee Roberson, Diamonds in the Rough:
      "Oh, you know, the Man upstairs has been good to this person." I kept on pressing for an explanation. Finally I was told, "Oh, you know, the Man upstairs—He's the One who answers prayer."
    • 2007, Ellen Santilli Vaughn, Time Peace: Living Here and Now with a Timeless God:
      God can't be found in unsanctified imaginations or in the caricatures of pop culture. He is not The Man Upstairs. He does not "help those who help themselves."