This thread reminds me of one of my favorite stories: The Blind Men and the Elephant.
So who is not blind is a valid followup question. My answer is Jesus, Moses, Muhammad, Krishna, Rama, Buddha and others.
So what did they truly teach about the nature of God? We are faced with a problem of humans modifying words, mistranslating texts and interpreting obsolete formulations. And we are faced with our human inability to intellectually understand Divinity which by definition is beyond ordinary human consciousness.
In the terms of the parable, how can we reconcile that part which we touch, say the tail, with the reality of the "elephant"? One who I believe knows, Kabir, had this answer expressed in terms of Islam's vs Hindu's views:
Does Khuda live in the mosque?
Then who who lives everywhere?
Is Ram in idols and holy ground?
Have you looked and found him there?
Hari in the East, Allah in the West -
So you like to dream.
Search in the heart, in the heart alone:
There live Ram and Karim.
So who is not blind is a valid followup question. My answer is Jesus, Moses, Muhammad, Krishna, Rama, Buddha and others.
So what did they truly teach about the nature of God? We are faced with a problem of humans modifying words, mistranslating texts and interpreting obsolete formulations. And we are faced with our human inability to intellectually understand Divinity which by definition is beyond ordinary human consciousness.
In the terms of the parable, how can we reconcile that part which we touch, say the tail, with the reality of the "elephant"? One who I believe knows, Kabir, had this answer expressed in terms of Islam's vs Hindu's views:
Does Khuda live in the mosque?
Then who who lives everywhere?
Is Ram in idols and holy ground?
Have you looked and found him there?
Hari in the East, Allah in the West -
So you like to dream.
Search in the heart, in the heart alone:
There live Ram and Karim.