The God as Shown and told to us by Noah, Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus Christ, Muhammad the Bab and Baha'u'llah to name a few.Ahura Mazda ? is this the one God to which you refer ?
Regards Sarg
Regards Tony
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The God as Shown and told to us by Noah, Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus Christ, Muhammad the Bab and Baha'u'llah to name a few.Ahura Mazda ? is this the one God to which you refer ?
Regards Sarg
The God as Shown and told to us by Noah, Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus Christ, Muhammad the Bab and Baha'u'llah to name a few.
Regards Tony
If each religion contains a measure of truth and a measure of falsehood, who decides which part of each religion is true, and which part is false?
Not necessarily. Because understanding the story of Jesus in a different way could prove Islam is true. Both could be correct.Religions often contradict each other. Example; consider Islam vs Christianity. In order for Christianity to be true, Jesus had to have died on the cross, risen from the dead and ascended to heaven. However according to Islam, Jesus could not have died on the cross, if it's proven that he did, Islam would be proven false.
Don't get confused, this could be sorted out with the tool of "Religious Method of claim and gist of reason from the founder himself", for Christianity it would be from Jesus himself in first person, please, right?"Which religion is the one true religion?"
Well let's see. Christianity says its the one true religion. Within Christianity the Church of Christ says its the most true. The Jehovas witnesses say they are. The Mormons say they are. The Baptist say they are...etc. etc.
Idealistically, yes. The problem arises when the religion splinters into so many different factions. Some resembling each other very little. For instance; Catholicism and Jehovas Witnesses have very little in common, yet still have the title of Christian.Don't get confused, this could be sorted out with the tool of "Religious Method of claim and gist of reason from the founder himself", for Christianity it would be from Jesus himself in first person, please, right?
Regards
One could use the " Religious Method of claim and gist of reason from the founder himself" and find the truth very evident and clear, amazingly, please, right?Idealistically, yes. The problem arises when the religion splinters into so many different factions. Some resembling each other very little. For instance; Catholicism and Jehovas Witnesses have very little in common, yet still have the title of Christian.
My answer to that qestion:
I don't think a specific religion is one hundred percent true. I do not think one religion is the absolute true religion
I believe in perennial philosophy, a perspective in philosophy and spirituality that views religious traditions as sharing a single, metaphysical truth or origin. The perennial philosophy states that at the heart of each authentic tradition lies one Universal, Timeless Truth that transcends all time and space.
A more popular interpretation argues for universalism, the idea that all religions, underneath seeming differences, point to the same Truth. no religion is the only truth, but that truth is found within them all
What is your answer to that question? Which religion is the one true religion according to you?
Have one tried it, please, right?David1967:
#45
"Which religion is the one true religion?"
Well let's see. Christianity says its the one true religion. Within Christianity the Church of Christ says its the most true. The Jehovas witnesses say they are. The Mormons say they are. The Baptist say they are...etc. etc.
paarsurrey said:
Don't get confused, this could be sorted out with the tool of "Religious Method of claim and gist of reason from the founder himself", for Christianity it would be from Jesus himself in first person, please, right?
One could use the " Religious Method of claim and gist of reason from the founder himself" and find the truth very evident and clear, amazingly, please, right?
OMGosh this is like the third time in the last two days that you have quoted yourself. Look, if no one answers, it means no one is interested. Move on.Have one tried it, please, right?
Regards
My answer to that qestion:
I don't think a specific religion is one hundred percent true. I do not think one religion is the absolute true religion
I believe in perennial philosophy, a perspective in philosophy and spirituality that views religious traditions as sharing a single, metaphysical truth or origin. The perennial philosophy states that at the heart of each authentic tradition lies one Universal, Timeless Truth that transcends all time and space.
A more popular interpretation argues for universalism, the idea that all religions, underneath seeming differences, point to the same Truth. no religion is the only truth, but that truth is found within them all
What is your answer to that question? Which religion is the one true religion according to you?
Atheism, obviouslyMy answer to that qestion:
I don't think a specific religion is one hundred percent true. I do not think one religion is the absolute true religion
I believe in perennial philosophy, a perspective in philosophy and spirituality that views religious traditions as sharing a single, metaphysical truth or origin. The perennial philosophy states that at the heart of each authentic tradition lies one Universal, Timeless Truth that transcends all time and space.
A more popular interpretation argues for universalism, the idea that all religions, underneath seeming differences, point to the same Truth. no religion is the only truth, but that truth is found within them all
What is your answer to that question? Which religion is the one true religion according to you?
Let me ask you a question. What do you think a good religion should do for a person? I'll use the word good instead of true right now. So in other words, what would you expect from a good religion? Perhaps you can start...Have one tried it, please, right?
Regards
I think this is an excellent question that deserves a topic of its own rather than being buried on the third page of thread of a different topic that's over a month old. I'm going to create a new thread. Thank you for the idea.Let me ask you a question. What do you think a good religion should do for a person? I'll use the word good instead of true right now. So in other words, what would you expect from a good religion? Perhaps you can start...
Don't you think this may be missing the boat here? If our criterion is "what it does for me" then I'd be going for the highest bidder. My thinking is religious views involve a connection w/ the universe and a chance to do what's right. I certainly wouldn't go for a religion that said screw the universe and do what I say no matter what and here's $17.50 to join.Let me ask you a question. What do you think a good religion should do for a person? I'll use the word good instead of true right now. So in other words, what would you expect from a good religion? Perhaps you can start...
I do believe many religions are true enough for those that believe in them. The Baha'i Faith is great for people that want to be part of a new religion that is working towards uniting all people, no matter what race or religion that they came from. It's a great religion for those that believe God has always been guiding people and has always been sending new messengers with new teachings. And that God's latest message through his latest prophet has the teachings that will eventually bring peace to the world. That's a great religion to believe in.The God as Shown and told to us by Noah, Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus Christ, Muhammad the Bab and Baha'u'llah to name a few.
Regards Tony
It would be a very bland and boring garden if all the flowers were the same CG.I do believe many religions are true enough for those that believe in them. The Baha'i Faith is great for people that want to be part of a new religion that is working towards uniting all people, no matter what race or religion that they came from. It's a great religion for those that believe God has always been guiding people and has always been sending new messengers with new teachings. And that God's latest message through his latest prophet has the teachings that will eventually bring peace to the world. That's a great religion to believe in.
However, who was the God of Noah? He cursed Adam and Eve and the whole Earth, because Adam disobeyed him. A few centuries later, there were giants in the land and most everybody was doing evil. This God was sorry he had created man and decided to kill all of them except Noah and his family.
After a fresh start, people were still doing evil and worshipping false gods. But he liked Abraham. So, what does God ask of Abraham? He tells him to go sacrifice his son? What kind of God would do that? And why would anybody listen to a God like that? But Abraham did. And fortunately, it was only a test. God stopped him just before Abraham was going to plunge a knife into his son's chest.
Then there's Moses. Were still within the teachings of the Hebrew Bible. It is their beliefs about their God. This God sends curses and plagues on the Egyptians and hates all people that worship other gods. He drowns the whole Egyptian army. This God gives a bunch of laws to Moses to give to the people. Later, after Moses dies, this God leads his people into the "promised" land. In that land this God helps his people kill and destroy every city along the way. In some cities this God orders them to kill all the men, woman and children in the city.
These are the ancient stories and myths of a people. I'm not surprised that the "supreme" God is on their side, and that all the other people were evil and deserved to die. Could people get away with stories of their God doing things like that today? No. For ancient times? Yeah. But do people these days really think that the "good" and "holy" God that they believe in today, actually did those things? Yeah, some do.
But now let's leave the God of the Children of Israel and go to India. Who is the God of Krishna? Vishnu? Who is Vishnu? One of many Gods? And, for some, Krishna is a God. This isn't the same God that Moses was following.
Buddha? I don't know what God he talked about.
Zoroaster? I don't know, but the things I've read make it sound like there were two deities, one good and one evil. The good one, of course, was more powerful and would win out in the end.
Jesus? Back to the God of Israel but with a few changes. One of them being that the old law wasn't required anymore. But this God had a bigger problem. The problem was sin. He couldn't let sin go unpunished, but no human could ever be good enough to pay the penalty for their sins. What this God needed was a perfect sacrifice, his son, Jesus. This God had an adversary, a powerful evil spirit being. This spirit being, so the story goes, turned evil and has been fighting against God ever since. This God, though, allows this spirit being to tempt and deceive humans. But part of the plan of this God was going to have his son pay for the penalty for sin, conquer death and conquer this spirit being all at the same time... all by sacrificing his son's life by dying on a cross. But did this God let his son just die and have his body rot away? No, this God raised him from the dead.
Then there's Muhammad. With Muhammad. God again brings in a bunch of laws. So, God goes from lots of laws in Judaism. To getting rid of those laws with Christianity. To bringing back a bunch of laws with Islam.
Then there's the Bab. A few years, his laws I don't think ever got enforced. But God's main purpose for him was to declare himself a prophet of God in 1844. For Baha'is that fulfilled a whole bunch of Bible prophecies. And his big pronouncement was that another manifestation of God was coming soon.
And that gets us to Baha'u'llah. He says that all these messengers all came from the same, one true God. That all these religions were the "true" religion for their times. Unfortunately, all of them got corrupted in one way or another. All of them got misinterpreted and misunderstood in one way or another. So, this time, God had the prophet write down God's laws and teachings, so there'd be no confusion, or at least less confusion.
So, just in a simple, basic look at some of these religions, does it seem like one God is behind all of them? But does it matter? Because I really think all of them are true, that is, they all become true to those that believe and follow them. But are any of them really true?