Posts tagged "Religion"
2

Crossroads

I scribbled this out during church one day:

One day you will come to a crossroads. At this point you will find a shocking disparity between what you’ve learned with your mind and what you know with your heart. This disparity exists for all of us but is easily subverted. At some point, this disparity becomes impossible for us to ignore. When you come to that convergence, the questions that theology and faith pose will become suddenly very important. The reason I participate actively in my faith now is so that when I come to that crossroads I’ll be prepared to travel it with both an educated mind as well as an informed heart.

This does not mean that faith of any kind is easy, just as a college course that’s worth taking is not easy. It also does not mean that one morning you decide what direction you’ll take on that crossroads and hold to it the rest of your time on earth. Faith is ever changing, ever difficult. It is a turbulent relationship with a Lover who knows you fully but whom you can never fully figure out. It’s the kind of relationship full of good days and bad days and fights and make-ups that is, in the end, the only kind of relationship worth having.

Comments
1

I was asked to sum up “World Religions”

Here was my response:

I will be so bold as to assert that I can sum up World Religions in a single sentence: World Religion is the attempt to reconcile “truth” with “Truth”.

            Every religion we’ve study seems to be on a search to take what they feel is right or good, and reconcile it with a force greater then themselves. It’s the search for where our feelings come from. It’s the journey we go on to find out, not what a star is made of, but what exists in between stars. It’s the acknowledgment that nothingness is still something, and that the end of our empirical knowledge of the true workings of the universe is also the beginning of our journey to the divine. In the words of Socrates “all I know is that I know nothing”.

            To clarify, “truth” is the correspondence between object and thing. The fact that correspondence requires an interaction designates “truth” as a relationship. Something may be true from one point of view that is not from another. If I’m looking from the west wing of a building into a parking lot, I see five cars. If you are looking from the east you may only see four or you may see six. The fact that we are in different places does not make one of us a liar, it simply means that we see things differently from our various perspectives and that what is true for you is not for me. Truth, with a capital “T”, is the man in the helicopter who can see all possible parking lots and can definitively tell us how many, what color, and what model cars there are in the entire city. So, as you see by the expansion of this metaphor, my assertion that major world religions attempt to reconcile what they see with what they cannot see (but submit to the idea that there is One who can) is very convincing.

            A common misconception of World Religions is that they are separate. I would posit that, in this day and age, they are parallel paths to the same destination. In antiquity, when there existed true polytheism on a mass scale (Norse and Greek/Roman mythology) there also existed true division between regional worships. However, suggesting that the idea of Brahma can really put Hinduism out of the polytheist family, we now exist in a world where the remaining popular beliefs are all on a search for a reunification with one god. This is essentially the same goal. I suspect that it would have been vastly more difficult to find common threads between Judaism and Norse belief than it is to find, for instance, commonalities between Christianity and Hinduism.

            Thus, in some ways, our operational definition of religion as “providing social unity and a personal sense of salvation” both works and doesn’t. Traditionally, this was thought to mean that it brought unity to your specific society. However, as an example from my own faith, Christ discouraged this idea in an attempt at global, rather than local, unity. Jesus said in Matthew chapter 10 

“Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. 35 For I have come to turn
   ” ‘a man against his father,
      a daughter against her mother,
   a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law -
    36a man’s enemies will be the members of his own household.’

           Out of context this seems to be Jesus’ call for the end of social unity. However, when looking at the wider context of His life through the Gospels, we see the larger picture. In Matthew Chapter 12, Christ’s disciples inform him that his family would like to see him. Christ then rejects the center of the social structure, the blood family, and says that whosoever does the will of G-d are his family. In this, Christ is calling for the destruction of communal religious unity and suggesting that we may all be brothers and sisters under the Will of G-d. It’s also worth noting that this directly confounds the Moral Majority’s claim that the American family is the bedrock of our society.

            This can also be seen in other major religions. Jews have taken to accepting converts and also are active in various forms of interfaith council. Even the Hasidic Rabbi who spoke with us in class seemed to have a very accepting notion of others faiths, even those that seemed to confound his own. Hindus have always been of the mind that we are all Brahma and it could be argued that the pluralization of World Religion(s) is but maya (the ego, which deludes us into thinking that we are separate). Buddhism has proven time and again that it embraces all faiths and requires only a cognizance of the noble paths. Even Islam recognizes its Western brethren as “people of the book” and has the faction of Sufism which mingles in Eastern faith. No matter where you go, if you can possibly sift out all of the power-struggles, land grabbing, and political posturing that taints the faiths of the world, we’ll see that we are ever working toward turning World Religions into it’s singular form, World Religion.

            At the risk of being short winded I think that the above is the best way for me to describe World Religion. We could spend volumes going over each belief system and it’s thoughts and practices. This is worth doing, just as one cannot decide that 3 + 3 = 6 and that is the only way to get to six. We must realize that you can also divide, multiply, fraction, and otherwise cross-quantify six. The answer is always the same, but the methods are the beauty, not the conflict, of the problem.

Comments

Constantine’s Nonsense

           If a religion is a community with shared beliefs and practices, and the center of a religion is social unity, then the story of Constantine and the subsequent biblical inconsistencies with his conversion and the mainstreaming of the Christian religion is center to the overall history of the group. All the following wars and hypocrisies, genocides and atrocities, can be tracked back to this genesis of Christianity’s conversion from separatist Jewish cult to major organizational institution.

            The story still held as fact in many scholarly circles of Constantine’s first spiritual interaction with “Christ” dates back to the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312 BCE. Constantine claimed to have seen a crucifix, then dreamt that Christ explained to him the meaning. He had crosses painted on his soldiers shield and they crossed a bridge to slaughter their enemies. After this, Constantine was said to have converted and gradually raised Christianity up to be the dominant religion in his empire. However, Christian symbolism was only seen in his personal effects. He still used the symbolism of gods such as Apollo and Diana on the public monument, which celebrated the victory at Milivan Bridge that Christ allegedly delivered unto Constantine. When Constantine, now a “Christian”, dedicated Constantinople, he did so in full Apollonian garb.

            Not only are his mixture of traditional Roman polytheisms with Christianity an obvious inconsistency (“You shall have no other gods before me”) but his allegation of divine appointment is inconsistent with the Jesus of the Bible. In the New Testament, Jesus teachings are often split up into parables, questions, and edicts. Christ would often to fictional stories to illustrate a point and speculatively to allow for some interpretation. When faced with an ensnaring question (usually from political figures of the day) Christ would often answer with a conundrum and thus stump his attackers. On a more rare occasion, Christ would actually say things outright, making declarations or edicts. In Matthew chapter 5, Jesus says “You have heard that it was said, ‘an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. If someone forces you to go one mile, go with him two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.” This seems to be a command with the start of the paragraph saying “I tell you”. This is in stark contrast with the idea that Christ would, like the G-d of the Old Testament, appear to a military leader and tell him how to strike back and kill his enemies.

            This is important to the understanding of the Christians as a faith and as a people because it clearly indicts the forming and violent maintenance of any “Christian” nation, which was a product of Constantine’s reign. We’ve seen in our course that a major conflict is the separating of the actual beliefs from the non-religious activities carried out in the name of those beliefs, especially in Western religion. From the forming of the Nation of Israel to the church’s horrendous blind eye to the holocaust and the oppression occurring in Muslim nations world wide. The fact is that these monikers, as stated by post-modern Christian writer Rob Bell, “make excellent nouns and poor adjectives”. To be a Jew or Muslim or Christian is a good and decent thing, but to label something as Muslim, Jewish, or Christian inherently brings problems, especially when power is involved in teachings that call for humble servitude.

Comments

Religion is so HARD!

Having switched my minor to Religious Studies, I have been in this Intro to Old Testament class thinking that Judeo/Christian theology is confusing.

Then I started reading this book on Krsna that I got from a monk in Carytown.

It’s like religious quantum physics.
Kudos to you, devotees of The Supreme Personality of Godhead. I almost wish I had to read my Bible with four web browser windows open just to begin to understand it.


Comments