Letās say we are both wrong and we end up in front of Shiva. Would you expect to be punished for your honestly held beliefs?
Iād wager not.
I expect that we all know the fact that we want to know what is really real.
I also expect that āif there is a Godā, that God would also have created his intelligent creatures to have this desire, since all that this God knows is what is really real.
Now, if, for intelligent beings, knowing what is really real is their vitality, their life, then I would expect that settling for what is less than really real is a defect of bringing their knowing to its fullness.
We have the proclamations of the religions in the world, and it is not a matter of sincerity for us, but a matter of knowing whether what is proclaimed is true or not.
Even if the proclamations are matters of ābeliefā since the spiritual is beyond our sensitive apprehension, our reason is able to recognize what cannot or could not be. And this leaves any remaining as āoptionsā that our reason cannot renounce for their unreasonableness.
With Jesus, we have the only religion where in recorded human history, there is the material apprehension of a God coming in person, and human, to do the proclamation of his reality and truth in person. Then doing the act of love of a person loving his God, pouring his life back into this God, as his Father, and giving his body and blood to his own for them to consume, and have his material being within their material being.
And there is the witness that life was poured back to him (from his Father), and he rose, his material being, with new and final material being - including into the body his followers ate and drank, when they also were filled with the pouring of life back into him as they received the Holy Spirit.
This proclamation is in the world, from this God; Shivaās theology is also available. But we, being human, intelligible and intellectual being, have a goal of knowing the really real and abandoning the not really real. Ignorance of this (ignoring āto knowā), is not part of our purpose. When we deny Shiva, it is because we reason the error of being really real about Shiva. And if we have found error, we āKNOWā Shiva cannot be real and will not be found when we pass from this world. We cannot find such knowing or error in Jesus and his being. Even if we must believe in him, yet we cannot find defect via reason. We can only find that it is desirable for him to be really from where he claims to be from, and to be part of him.
If we are sincerely searching for the really real, and never settling for less, then we are what we were made to do, we are living our being.
If we opt into a religion without asking if it is really real, we are usually doing if out of a kind of laziness and selfish benefit we have discovered in choosing that path.
It is āinteresting to idle curiosityā to perceive that there are many religious teachings in the world, but it is life to know the really real, and to reject perceptions defective of this knowing as non-options. As humans, we have a mandate to know: āWhat is this?ā āIs it true?ā and āIs it good to be one with this?ā And then to join to it, or flee from it.
If the object of our āsincerityā is defective of being really real, then our sincerity is an ignorant sincerity, defective because we call āreally realā that which is not. Someone said, āA foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.ā Which is what most sincerity is about - not wanting to know the truth about a preferred belief, but simply preferring it for its immediate apprehended advantage.