Thought some views expressed by a Jungian in a 2000 book chapter from a Jungian higher education institute, (Patrick Mahaffey's "Religious Pluralism in the Service of the Psyche") raises interesting points-not to mention pretty well describes where I personally am coming from. So, thought I'd start a thread re it.
In it he quotes Raimundo Panikkar, a Catholic theologian & historian of religions as saying: "It is not that this reality has many names as if there were a reality outside the name. This reality is many names and each name is a new aspect, a new manifestation and revelation of it. Yet each name teaches or expresses, as it were, the undivided Mystery...The different religious traditions...are like the almost infinite number of colors that appear once the divine or simply white light of reality falls on the prism of human experience: it refracts into innumerable traditions, doctrines, and religions. Green is not yellow, Hinduism is not Buddhism, and yet at the fringes one cannot know, except by postulating it artificially, where yellow ends and green begins. Even more, through any particular color-through any particular religion-one can reach the source of the white light..."
Instead of "relative" truths perhaps it is better to speak of "relational truths." He alos quotes another Christian theologian, Paul Knitter: "Truth is defined not by exclusion but by relation...What is true will reveal itself mainly by its ability to be related to other expressions of truth and to grow through these relationships."
Also like the quote in here from Wilfred Smith: "Our solidarity precedes our particularity, and is part of our self-transcendence. The truth of all of us is part of the truth of each of us."
Take care, Earl
In it he quotes Raimundo Panikkar, a Catholic theologian & historian of religions as saying: "It is not that this reality has many names as if there were a reality outside the name. This reality is many names and each name is a new aspect, a new manifestation and revelation of it. Yet each name teaches or expresses, as it were, the undivided Mystery...The different religious traditions...are like the almost infinite number of colors that appear once the divine or simply white light of reality falls on the prism of human experience: it refracts into innumerable traditions, doctrines, and religions. Green is not yellow, Hinduism is not Buddhism, and yet at the fringes one cannot know, except by postulating it artificially, where yellow ends and green begins. Even more, through any particular color-through any particular religion-one can reach the source of the white light..."
Instead of "relative" truths perhaps it is better to speak of "relational truths." He alos quotes another Christian theologian, Paul Knitter: "Truth is defined not by exclusion but by relation...What is true will reveal itself mainly by its ability to be related to other expressions of truth and to grow through these relationships."
Also like the quote in here from Wilfred Smith: "Our solidarity precedes our particularity, and is part of our self-transcendence. The truth of all of us is part of the truth of each of us."
Take care, Earl