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It surprised me considerably to learn, first, that Bahais do talk of God - apparently, a singular God - all the time, and then that they nonetheless expect to be compatible with other faiths in general and Hinduism and Buddhism specifically.
My sincere impression is that the Bahai Faith has no obvious mechanisms to balance any hypothetical loss of constructive direction from the UHJ. Perhaps those mechanisms exist and I am simply unaware of them. Perhaps it is believed or hoped that God will keep them true to constructive paths.
Those are evidence that monotheism is not entirely unknown in non-monotheistic beliefs.I would add that this is not necessarily the case... but there are monotheistic elements in Hinduism.
In the case of Buddhism we respect the approach of "via negativa"... "not this....not this" to approach the Absolute as we also recognize that the Essence of God is "unknown".
The Buddha also redefined the earlier Vedic religion and stipulated what a "true" Brahmin should consist of...thus the pattern I indicated in my post above in which the later revelation redefines the earlier one or shall we say restores the spiritual nature of it for the more recent time in which people are living.
I beg to differ. That is not a particularly important point, far as I can see. Not for the matter at hand, anyway.One final and no less important point is the common base of language between the Vedic and the Avestan languages:
There are lot of familiar names in Avesta from the Rig-Veda and one of the first references comes not from India or Persia, but from northern Syria. A treaty signed by the Hittites and Mitannis dating to the fourteenth century BC calls upon Indara/Indra, Mitras(il)/Mitra, Nasatianna/Nasatya and Uruvanass(il)/Varuna, all known to Rig-Veda and Avesta.
http://varnam.nationalinterest.in/2007/01/avesta_and_rig_veda/
Luis,
I don't know how much you have reviewed the statements and positions of the House of Justice but you'll find they constantly defer to the Baha'i Writings and the perspectives of Shoghi Effendi the Guardian of the Baha'i Faith from 1921 until his passing in 1957.
- Art
Forget your Hindu and Buddhist brothers, first address your Muslim brothers and sisters. They are more relevant for you... I am prepared to open up this thread for any constructive criticisms or questions from (primarily) my Hindu and Buddhist brothers and sisters, ..
As a Hindu in reply to your question to a Buddhist, why do you need to approach us? You have your religion, we have ours.But I have a question for you, as a Buddhist: do you have any criticism about the way many Bahá’ís approach your religion?
None of the four Indian religions is a revealed religion (some people say that about Vedas and BhagawadGita but there is no evidence. Very much like Bahaullah claim of divinity). They are thought-out religions. Is there any problem with that?I perceive that that's more so pertaining to the time, the day and age in which we as human beings have lived and in which the Religions were revealed, not so much with the Religions in and of themselves.
You are right. By this time Bahaullah is stale. He died in 1892. We have had many great people (you term them as manifestations) in the meantime. Gandhi was assasinated in 1948, Ramana Mharshi died in 1950 and Swami Sivananda in 1963. My favorite Swami Adgadananda died in 1969. Swami Chinmayananda died in 1993. Swami Chidananda is still holding forth. There is no age in which India is not blessed by wise and holy people.While we as Bahá’ís do believe that our Faith is the one revealed for our Day and Age, .. Bahá’u’lláh was not the first, nor is He the last.
But that House is part of your religion. Why do you think my interpretation or that of any other person is wrong?Authoritative interpretation of the Sacred Writings, that's the job of the Universal House of Justice.
So how come there are similarities between Indian God/Goddess names and words with Gods/Goddesses and words in Russian, Balkan, Greek, Roman, Germanic, Celtic and Norse/Lithuanian. Yes, the Mittani reference may be the first but people who worshiped these deities in their various names were spread over a very large area. Hitties and Mittanis were really the first Aryan contact with Mesopotamia and Egypt. The transmission of Vedas was oral for many milleniums. Writing was not required by us. Aryans did not have empires. They were herders."There are lot of familiar names in Avesta from the Rig-Veda and one of the first references comes not from India or Persia, but from northern Syria. A treaty signed by the Hittites and Mitannis dating to the fourteenth century BC calls upon Indara/Indra, Mitras(il)/Mitra, Nasatianna/Nasatya and Uruvanass(il)/Varuna, all known to Rig-Veda and Avesta."
This has been my thought as well that this whole elevation of a man who had a vision and insight in his day as THE prophet for the current Age, spanning generations blinds one from seeing the forest through the trees. Divine light shines in all hearts and minds if we let it. I just have a real issue divinizing individuals as "sent by God", when everyone is. Then to couple that with a "central authority" who decides what is "orthodox" beliefs or not, reduces insight and revelation into dogma and control, transfiguring it into something other than revelation.You are right. By this time Bahaullah is stale. He died in 1892. We have had many great people (you term them as manifestations) in the meantime. Gandhi was assasinated in 1948, Ramana Mharshi died in 1950 and Swami Sivananda in 1963. My favorite Swami Adgadananda died in 1969. Swami Chinmayananda died in 1993. Swami Chidananda is still holding forth. There is no age in which India is not blessed by wise and holy people.But that House is part of your religion. Why do you think my interpretation or that of any other person is wrong?
So this "unifying vision of the future." Should I take this to mean that Baha'i wish to position itself as a universal religion (but not necessarily the universal religion, as in only we should exist and other religions should go away)?
I must agree. While there is something to be said for making an effort to be true to past leadership figures, such efforts are usually overdone and end up compromising the validity of the doctrine.This has been my thought as well that this whole elevation of a man who had a vision and insight in his day as THE prophet for the current Age, spanning generations blinds one from seeing the forest through the trees. Divine light shines in all hearts and minds if we let it. I just have a real issue divinizing individuals as "sent by God", when everyone is. Then to couple that with a "central authority" who decides what is "orthodox" beliefs or not, reduces insight and revelation into dogma and control, transfiguring it into something other than revelation.
Well the verse said: 'So this "unifying vision of the future." Should I take this to mean that Baha'i wish to position itself as a universal religion (but not necessarily the universal religion, as in only we should exist and other religions should go away)?'"...[...]...missed?...[...]..."
On the surface it sounds like an acceptance of multiple points of view, but recall what I said in my post you responded to which you didn't exactly address in this response?While we as Bahá’ís do believe that our Faith is the one revealed for our Day and Age, we don't teach that people who are not Bahá’ís are living in a lesser light. God forbid! Every time a Messenger of God appears is like the Divine Springtime. Bahá’u’lláh was not the first, nor is He the last. In His Gleanings, Bahá’u’lláh promises us that,
“these Mirrors will everlastingly succeed each other, and will continue to reflect the light of the Ancient of Days. They that reflect their glory will, in like manner, continue to exist for evermore, for the Grace of God can never cease from flowing. This is a truth that none can disprove.”
Oh, dear Windwalker. This is beautiful!
What do you mean? Doesn't the verse I quoted come from (Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, XXI)? I might suggest you read the quote I posted from there and try to understand it in the context I presented. Do you have have a different opinion than what I presented? If so, what is that? I'm interested in hearing how you do not see there is an inherent problem with having a central authority to rule on what is allowed belief or not.I'm sorry, @Windwalker , but I don't know anything about that.
What do you mean? Doesn't the verse I quoted come from (Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, XXI)? I might suggest you read the quote I posted from there and try to understand it in the context I presented. Do you have have a different opinion that what I presented? If so, what is that?