G
Gnosis
Guest
I would agree that it is not realistic to think that every truth can be discovered by one person in his single lifetime, as we are limited persons. Which is why scripture is always important. But I would disagree that the nature of God is something that can be discovered through revelation alone. I have a serious issue with the idea of historic revelation, which basically amounts to the claim that the sacred writings of one culture are written by God to the exclusion of all others. The nature of God should not be something hidden from us, something that God has to reveal to us. We are made in the very image of God himself, therefore to see God one only has to look within, in introspection. We look to the self to see God and to discern his nature. There is really little about the Bible that can earn it the title as “the unique revelation of the one God”. The indigenous stories of the creation and their “wild gods” are certainly as legitimate as the creation story treasured by the Christian and Jewish tradition, as all are myths intended to convey a truth that is outside of history. The Christian story is as wild as any other: woman is created out of a man’s rib, man is created out of the dust of the earth, they are placed in an eternal paradise with a tree that bears the fruit of immortality. Within the garden there is a tree that contains the fruit of knowledge. There is no death, no decay, no suffering. Yet a talking snake with legs deceives them and causes humanity to go against God. These are very common mythical elements, and basically stem from the Babylonian culture that pre-dated the Hebrews. They took these myths and changed them to fit into monotheism.
Why would God rely on historical revelation instead of writing this “revelation” on our hearts? Secondly, why would God reveal this to only one culture to the exclusion of all others? It seems rather odd that God makes a covenant with Israel alone and reveals his true nature to only a fraction of the world’s populace while allowing the rest of the earth to speculate and “invent” their own ideas about God. In addition, this so called revelation from God often contradicts the human experience of the world. This is essential in eastern thought, because experience is key. While we do revere scriptures, we do not confine our experience to what scripture says our experience of God has to be. I am sure you will say that experience is “subjective” and that many factors cloud our judgments so that we can not discern what is authentic and what is not….which leads to the idea that only scripture can confirm it. While this is a neat and tidy notion, it fails in its practical application. Far too many spiritual experiences step outside the box that scripture has drawn. Are these all simply false? Is one way of knowing God right and all others wrong? Or are they all different ways of perceiving the same reality? Which is why eastern thought is quick to affirm the validity of the western experience, but the west will no do the same. Eastern thought recognizes that our experience of what many have come to call “God” are as diverse as the world, and that this reality, “God”, is experienced within a context through which he can be understood. (continued)
Why would God rely on historical revelation instead of writing this “revelation” on our hearts? Secondly, why would God reveal this to only one culture to the exclusion of all others? It seems rather odd that God makes a covenant with Israel alone and reveals his true nature to only a fraction of the world’s populace while allowing the rest of the earth to speculate and “invent” their own ideas about God. In addition, this so called revelation from God often contradicts the human experience of the world. This is essential in eastern thought, because experience is key. While we do revere scriptures, we do not confine our experience to what scripture says our experience of God has to be. I am sure you will say that experience is “subjective” and that many factors cloud our judgments so that we can not discern what is authentic and what is not….which leads to the idea that only scripture can confirm it. While this is a neat and tidy notion, it fails in its practical application. Far too many spiritual experiences step outside the box that scripture has drawn. Are these all simply false? Is one way of knowing God right and all others wrong? Or are they all different ways of perceiving the same reality? Which is why eastern thought is quick to affirm the validity of the western experience, but the west will no do the same. Eastern thought recognizes that our experience of what many have come to call “God” are as diverse as the world, and that this reality, “God”, is experienced within a context through which he can be understood. (continued)