Social media addicts are more apt to believe that no religion is the truth. This feeling is often illustrated by
the favorite parable of college professors: the parable of the six
blind men and the elephant.
This is where each blind man feels a different
part of the elephant and therefore reaches a different conclusion about the
object in front of him.
·
One
grabs the tusk and says, “This is a spear.”
·
Another
feels the trunk and says, “This is a snake.”
·
The
one hugging the leg claims, “This is a tree.”
·
The
blind man holding the tail thinks, “I have a rope.”
·
The
one feeling the ear believes, “This is a fan.”
·
And
the one leaning on the elephant’s side is certain, “This is a wall.”
These blind men are said to represent
world religions because they each come to a different conclusion about what
they are sensing. Like each blind man, we are told, no one religion has the
truth. No one religion has the complete box top. Religions are simply different
paths up the same mountain.
This, of course, greatly appeals to the minds used to cute but shallow Instagram slogan. In post-Pandemic America, truth in religion is considered an
oxymoron. There is no truth in religion, we are told. It’s all a matter of
taste or opinion. You like chocolate, I like vanilla. You like Christianity, I
like Islam. If Buddhism works for you, then it’s true for you. Besides, you
ought not judge me for my beliefs. Just wear your face mask - a psychological symbol of egalitarianism beyond the necessary physical protection.
The other problem with truth in
religion is that some pieces of life seem to defy explanation - they don’t
appear to fit any religious box top. These include the existence of evil and
the silence of God in the face of that evil. These are especially powerful
objections to anyone claiming that an all-powerful (theistic) God exists.
Many skeptics and atheists argue that if
one true, powerful God actually exists, then he would intervene to clear up all
the confusion. After all, if God is really out there, then why does he seem to
hide himself? Why doesn’t he just show up to debunk the false religions and end
all the controversy? Why doesn’t he intervene to stop all the evil in the
world, including all the religious wars that are such a black mark on his name?
And why does he allow bad things to happen to good people?
These are difficult
questions for anyone claiming that their theistic religion is true. (Hart, David Bentley, Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashinable Enemies . Yale University Press. p.67) Nevertheless, Christianity is the only major faith built entirely around a single historical claim. It is, however, a claim quite unlike any other ever made, as any perceptive and scrupulous historian must recognize. Certainly it bears no resemblance to the vague fantasies of witless enthusiasts or to the cunning machinations of opportunistic charlatans.
It is the report of men and women who had suffered the devastating defeat of their beloved master’s death, but who in a very short time were proclaiming an immediate experience of his living presence beyond the tomb, and who were, it seems, willing to suffer privation, imprisonment, torture, and death rather than deny that experience.
And it is the report of a man, Saul of Tarsus, who had never known Jesus before the crucifixion, and who had once persecuted Jesus’s followers, but who also believed that he had experienced the risen Christ, with such shattering power that he too preferred death to apostasy.
And it is the report of countless others who have believed that they also—in a quite irreducibly personal way—have known the risen Christ. Add me too here...
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