I’ve been reading this whole thread, and have had responses to practically every comment… unfortunately it would take too long to respond to all of them, haha! But in regards to God and Truth, here are my thoughts:
In talking about the Divine, we’re talking about something that exists beyond the limitations of time and space, something far greater than what the human mind can even begin to comprehend. The ancient Gnostics, for example, referred to God as the Ineffable Father, because you can’t explain Him with the limitations of language – the minute you do, you’re setting up limitations that don’t actually exist for Him. Of course, as humans, we have to find some way to talk about Him, so His nature is expressed in a wide variety of ways… which leads to many different religious philosophies. Likewise, we need some way to connect to Him, through prayer, ritual, etc… So praxis comes in many different forms. One theory or practice might resonate with one person, but does absolutely nothing for someone else; yet they’re both still striving to connect with their ultimate Source. It doesn’t matter how we define God, or what we call Him. What matters is that we find a way to connect with Him, whether that be through Catholicism, Methodism, Lutheranism, Paganism, Hinduism… whatever.
I’ll be straightforward, I’m clergy in a Christian Gnostic church; I was raised Protestant; I converted to Catholicism as a teenager and still somewhat identify with my Catholicity; *and *I practiced Wicca for several years. In all that time, I was searching for Truth; and I was convinced of the truth of each those religions (as far as I could tell!) at the time I was practicing them. At no time, however, was I ever separated from God – I was still connecting with the same Ineffable God, no matter what I called Him, or what the outward trappings were.
I’d originally wanted to quote part of this passage from the Gospel of Philip in response to someone’s suggestion that the Trinity was a 4th century belief, because it illustrates that at least some Christians already held a belief in the Trinity prior to that (it’s far more explicit about Trinitarian belief than any of the canonical gospels!). But I think quoting a bit more of it illustrates Truth even better:
Truth has to come into the world in a form that people are able to receive it… For some they find Truth in Christianity, others find it in Paganism, still others find it in Islam. For me, Gnosticism has answered more of the questions I’ve had than any other religion. That’s not to say that it’s right for everyone, but it works for me! The real point is to connect with the Divine, somehow. But to say that only one religion describes ineffable truths accurately, is not only a bit arrogant, but it puts limitations on God that don’t actually exist.
(Sorry for the ridiculously long response, I’m not very good at being concise, haha!) Pax!