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Okay. Well then why is Buddhism considered a revealed religion while Confucianism is considered to be non-revealed?
Just guessing, I would suggest that whoever said that Buddhism was a revealed religion considered the Buddha to be like the Christ, or even a "god". I don't think it is a relealed religion, and The Great Wiki appears to support that.Okay. Well then why is Buddhism considered a revealed religion while Confucianism is considered to be non-revealed?
I imagine a circle of people within which that statement is true, but to make it not true --to make "revealed relgion" useful again --just requires stepping out of that circle and into another.It seems to me that "revealed religion" is a very arbitrary and functionless construct who's only purpose seems to be to belittle eastern religions and philosophy.
I, like many atheists I suppose, find the revealed religions to be less easy to grasp in terms of their symbolism, hence less believable, hence less useful, than the non-revealed. That makes for a significant discernment. I dare say, I didn't "get it" at all in terms of understanding a "god" (though I thought I had) until I was exposed to the non-revealed religions.how is it useful to discern between the allegedly "revealed" and "non-revealed" religions?
They were all created or written by human beings. The only difference is their respective concepts of the divine.
Well in an arbitrary sense as Sunstone explained it, it is useful to discriminate here, because it makes a great difference in practice.how is it useful to discern between the allegedly "revealed" and "non-revealed" religions?
Well in an arbitrary sense as Sunstone explained it, it is useful to discriminate here, because it makes a great difference in practice.
Sunstone's explanation doesn't address why Confucianism is considered to be non-revealed and only marginally explains why Buddhism is considered by many to be non-revealed.
Again it just seems to be another way to belittle the "heathens" that do not believe in a monotheistic God.
The non-believers of the non-revealed religions have no stars on thars.
I dunno TeaLeaf. If I had a badge saying "I follow a REVEALED religion" many of the people around me would read it as "I follow a RETARDED religion". Who belittles who?Again it just seems to be another way to belittle the "heathens" that do not believe in a monotheistic God.
The non-believers of the non-revealed religions have no stars on thars.
I, like many atheists I suppose, find the revealed religions to be less easy to grasp in terms of their symbolism, hence less believable, hence less useful, than the non-revealed. That makes for a significant discernment. I dare say, I didn't "get it" at all in terms of understanding a "god" (though I thought I had) until I was exposed to the non-revealed religions.
Okay. Well then why is Buddhism considered a revealed religion while Confucianism is considered to be non-revealed?
Sunstone's explanation doesn't address why Confucianism is considered to be non-revealed and only marginally explains why Buddhism is considered by many to be non-revealed.
Again it just seems to be another way to belittle the "heathens" that do not believe in a monotheistic God.
The non-believers of the non-revealed religions have no stars on thars.
This is the first I hear of anyone considering thinking of Buddhism as revealed, actually.
Other than obviously wrong perspectives, that is, such as those who insist that Buddhism is a variety of Hinduism or even of Spiritism.
And I also agree with Willamena. Revealed religions actually seem weirder and less trustworthy to me.
I don't see how a non-revealed religion could be seen as lesser in any way just due to such an actually favorable circunstance.
As for Buddhism, where did the belief in Buddhism of reincarnation come from? Who proved that reincarnation is a natural fact? If there is no natural proof of reincarnation, the belief is not a non-revealed truth. It may be that the belief in reincarnation is cultural. In that case the people of the culture are the prophets. So Buddhism must be a revealed faith.-scottb-