Brother Unity
Seeker of Truth
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I am new to this forum and I would very much like some feedback about an issue that I am currently struggling with.
I have spent the past 25 years extensively studying comparative religion, sacred texts, religious history, mythology and ontology; and I have spent a good deal of my life discussing and debating the nature of Truth with people of many faiths, but increasingly I find myself in a quandry about religious dialogue.
I have always held pluralism to be one of the most important and necessary qualities of any truly spiritual person, and yet lately I find it difficult to acknowledge and afirm many of the patently absurd and sometime potentially dangerous views that people hold , sometimes in spite of, but usually as a result of their religious ideologies.
More and more, I feel like it is our duty as rational and compassionate human beings to have the courage to tell people when something is patently false or at least not readily verifiable (human beings presence on this planet being more likely the result of evolutionary biology than the result of an invisible man in the sky blowing his breath upon lumps of clay, for instance...) but this actually flys in the face of religious pluralism.
We must certainly respect people's cultural heritage and diversity, but how do we do this when they insist on holding such ridiculous, sectarian, and often socially divisive beliefs?
Thoughts, suggestions, insights?
I have spent the past 25 years extensively studying comparative religion, sacred texts, religious history, mythology and ontology; and I have spent a good deal of my life discussing and debating the nature of Truth with people of many faiths, but increasingly I find myself in a quandry about religious dialogue.
I have always held pluralism to be one of the most important and necessary qualities of any truly spiritual person, and yet lately I find it difficult to acknowledge and afirm many of the patently absurd and sometime potentially dangerous views that people hold , sometimes in spite of, but usually as a result of their religious ideologies.
More and more, I feel like it is our duty as rational and compassionate human beings to have the courage to tell people when something is patently false or at least not readily verifiable (human beings presence on this planet being more likely the result of evolutionary biology than the result of an invisible man in the sky blowing his breath upon lumps of clay, for instance...) but this actually flys in the face of religious pluralism.
We must certainly respect people's cultural heritage and diversity, but how do we do this when they insist on holding such ridiculous, sectarian, and often socially divisive beliefs?
Thoughts, suggestions, insights?