P
PRmerger
Guest
I thank you for sharing your personal story.PR I have heard you speak in this way before and have hesitated to share my own personal experience. I will do so now, and know that there are many other Baha’is who can confirm the same experience, although they will tell you, as I do, that words cannot contain or express the experience in any way shape or form.
. This will be a personal story. Mine.
. As mentioned before, having grown up as a Methodist in the Midwest, my understanding of God and religion was culturally affected by both my being white, and living on a Sioux Reservation. For me, prayer was what I was taught in church by my folks, my grandmother, and our minister and teachers. My Lakota friends had their own form of prayer, according to their culture, and I believe that their religion was given to them by God through the Prophets He sent to them long before my ancestors showed up, or those of similar geographic origin.
That there is a profound spiritual experience to be found among other religions, I have no doubt.. The closeness to God that I experienced in church was at its peak what Christians commonly call being “born again”. It is a spiritual awakening and a profound experience.
Let’s say that there is a person who profoundly believes that Santa Claus appears to him in a ceremony?. I can tell you also that the most sacred ritual among the Sioux is the Sweat Lodge ceremony. There are a lot of a characters now who may peddle some version of that among rich white folks nowadays and if they are lucky, they might get a whiff of what the real thing is all about, but I suspect it cannot be duplicated for a fee, if you catch my drift
Do you think that we must give credence to the veracity of this, because he feels so emotionally moved when it occurred?
Now, please do not read any disrespect in my allusion to Santa Claus. It is only because I must appeal to a figure we both know does not exist, in order to make my point.
And the point, again, is this: religious fervor and emotional experiences do not testify to the truth of an experience.
Again, to the degree that what the Native American people believe that is consonant with the Truth of God’s revelation, then I give them a hearty amen!My point here is twofold. One: What the Native American people had been given by God is every bit as valid as what you refer to, and it is out of prejudice or ignorance that you may think otherwise. I do not wish to confront you on this, for it is a bias which you yourself shall have to overcome.
Amen! One Planet. One People. ***United in Truth! ***One Planet. One People Please!