Gnosticagape said:
Thank you for your welcome Amy,
I add my welcome as well!
Gnosticagape said:
It is Matthew Fox and John Hick that I turn to for an example of Christian ecuminism. John Hick has a site where he posts talks and papers of his I found this interesting one today:
I would say Baha'is take a rather dim view of denominations, in general; that they are a fragmentation of the singular truth of a religion, a product of human issues rather than divine, in part a symptom of the practical ineffectual realities underneath those religions (when viewed as human endevours rather than divine bestowals) and sapping their vitality with "in house" disputes.
But of the bonifide religions (Islam, Buddhism, Christianity, etc.,) the Baha'i Faith scriptures I believe hold forth an affirmation no other scripture can match. Examples abound :
"
The songs which which the bird of thine heart had uttered in its great love for its friends have reached their ears, and moved Me to answer thy questions, and reveal to thee such secrets as I am allowed to unfold. In thine esteemed letter thou hadst inquired which of the Prophets of God should be regarded as superior to others. Know thou assuredly that the essence of all the Prophets of God is one and the same. Their unity is absolute. God, the Creator, saith: There is no distinction whatsoever among the Bearers of My Message. They all have but one purpose; their secret is the same secret. To prefer one in honor to another, to exalt certain ones above the rest, is in no wise to be permitted. Every true Prophet hath regarded His Message as fundamentally the same as the Revelation of every other Prophet gone before Him. If any man, therefore, should fail to comprehend this truth, and should consequently indulge in vain and unseemly language, no one whose sight is keen and whose understanding is enlightened would ever allow such idle talk to cause him to waver in his belief."
"
These sanctified Mirrors, these Day Springs of ancient glory, are, one and all, the Exponents on earth of Him Who is the central Orb of the universe, its Essence and ultimate Purpose. From Him proceed their knowledge and power; from Him is derived their sovereignty. The beauty of their countenance is but a reflection of His image, and their revelation a sign of His deathless glory. They are the Treasuries of Divine knowledge, and the Repositories of celestial wisdom. Through them is transmitted a grace that is infinite, and by them is revealed the Light that can never fade…. These Tabernacles of Holiness, these Primal Mirrors which reflect the light of unfading glory, are but expressions of Him Who is the Invisible of the Invisibles. By the revelation of these Gems of Divine virtue all the names and attributes of God, such as knowledge and power, sovereignty and dominion, mercy and wisdom, glory, bounty, and grace, are made manifest.
These attributes of God are not, and have never been, vouchsafed specially unto certain Prophets, and withheld from others. Nay, all the Prophets of God, His well-favored, His holy and chosen Messengers are, without exception, the bearers of His names, and the embodiments of His attributes. They only differ in the intensity of their revelation, and the comparative potency of their light. Even as He hath revealed: “Some of the Apostles We have caused to excel the others.”"
These are a tiny portion of the quotes refering to such themes as "the Prophets". And on this last theme where one might suppose that there is some difference among the prophets - that their revelation intensity varies - note elsewhere:
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O SON OF BEAUTY ! By My spirit and by My favor! By My mercy and by My beauty! All that I have revealed unto thee with the tongue of power, and have written for thee with the pen of might, hath been in accordance with thy capacity and understanding, not with My state and the melody of My voice."
So the variation has at least as much to do how well we are listening as anything else.
Gnosticagape said:
Do Baha'is believe that other religions are equally valid even today?
We do not view the religions has being happenstance members of history or the present. They are related, and those relationships have implications and substance. But they are not simply superceders in history. Any proper understanding of one religion really depends, in the context of understanding the Revelations, on understanding others. There is no Scripture which does not refer to some theme or idea from another Scripture - and I am not speaking of mearly covering the same idea from another point of view. I mean correction. The Qur'an speaks specifically to some Christian ideas. The New Testament speaks specifically to some Jewish ideas. Buddhism speaks specifically to some Hindu ideas. And so on it goes into the depths of history. Christ really was the fullfillment of some of Jewish prophecies. Muhammad was so of some Christian prophecies. And so on and on.
It is not a matter of differing forms of the truth needing to get along because of some hoped for common acceptance of some virtues. It is a matter of realizing that the whole history of humanity and religion has been about the singular process of moving humanity onward in a relationship with God, with a circumstance of partial appreciations of each revelation that God is time and again advancing past our failings, in light of our achievements, until the next Prophet, in a never ending divine bestowal of Prophets, will guide us onward to the next great outpouring.
The specific stage Baha'u'llah, as the Revelator of the Baha'i Faith, is called to address has been referred to as the maturation of humanity, of signalizing what we call the Most Great Peace and which must be presaged with the Lesser Peace we are in now, when governments will find fewer reasons for war and more reasons for mutual protection (at least compared bygone ages when wars were play things of tyrants as much as anything else.) Eventually a world civilization will be established, with unheard of advances, and respect for its citizens, and diversity, while at once rooting out prejudices and insanities taken as traditions people today are still struggling to explain as appropriate norms.
Back to your question a bit - every religion, every scripture, can speak to the heart today, each of them can bestow light upon light so yes, each is respected as a path of illumination to the heart and mind and eye and soul. But in other ways various details were ment for other ages and times, often superceded by specific details in other religions (like whether divorce is appropriate under any circumstances or not, whether animal sacrifice or veneration is appropriate....)
Baha'is have a postive bias I would content. Rather than encountering another religion or scripture as an uncomfortable moment to seak some manner of priority above, Baha'is seek to delve into the scripture to find it's truth and it's relationship to other religions and history and the present, often finding what we call "the same eternal truths".