N
Neithan
Guest
Well, given that truth must be one and pure, if these peaceful, tranquil, compassionate individuals hold contradictory worldviews than yes–some of them or wrong. But that does not necessarily mean that they are going to be evil. In Christianity we believe in ‘Natural Law,’ that God has ‘written His law on our hearts’ and that if Man sincerely lives his life according to His own conscience, He can be justified, he can be saved. This is called ‘Baptism of Desire.’ When one sincerely seeks God, He will answer their call. The improvement in Man’s nature when he seeks God is the result of His conformity to God Himself. Man is meant to find God and to image God. Peace, tranquility, love and compassion are consequences of Man’s sincere search for–and experience of–His Creator.And why, when we gather some of the most spiritual people on the planet together, do they seem to all have that same quality of inner peace and tranquility? Why do they all seem to have that same overriding sense of compassion and love? Has only one found the “truth”, and all the others lost in delusion?
God does not abandon His creatures who are ignorant of His Son. His Holy Spirit is present in every single act of human goodness, every single act of love. Buddha was inspired by the Holy Spirit no doubt, and seems to have been partially enlightened by Him, but He did not possess the fullness of the Truth which was to come with Christ. Ignorance does not equal evil, this is obvious by the vast number of virtuous non-Christians living both now and throughout human history.
Or is the truth not found in “the fruits that once produces”. We can claim that our theology is the most accurate, that our Church is the best, that our religion alone offers salvation until we are blue in the face.
More excellent points. We are to judge by the fruits which a religion produces; however, we have to be careful that we are judging the actual fruit and not just rotten imitations. To point at a Christian who happens to be a murderer, rapist, pedophile etc. and judge his religion thereby is dishonest because his religion condemns his own behaviour. The way to judge fruit is look at who the followers of a religion hold up as admirable role models. The Church considers her fruits to be the vast numbers of canonized saints throughout the centuries since Christ.
But in the end, the evidence lies not in the claims we make, but in the people we become. Not in the way we percieve God, but in how that perception of him changes who we are. Religion is not about concepts that we affirm to be true, rather its about a living, breathing spirituality that helps us to transcend limits that we never thought could be crossed. To become what we never thought we could be.
This is all wonderful sounding… but it doesn’t line up with any defense of relativism. First we have to agree on what sort of person is desireable to become, what man’s destiny is. This necessarily depends on our perceptions of God and the truths which follow from that perception.