Do we all worship the same God? Is it this one?
Someone asked me to support a "peace forest" as a sign of solidarity with all world religions. In the church we attend, from the pulpit I hear reference to all people "worshiping the same God in different forms". In a time when polls show that a plurality of Christians in America believe that there are more than one means of salvation, a peace forest to further blur the distinctions between religions is troubling. I'm afraid that we will reap what we sow.
I spent thirty years in Eastern religious pursuits, trying to do the same thing. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, my "master", and the Shankacharya tradition, the trunk from which Buddhism grew, were my context. Maharishi had encouraged me to broaden my devotion to God beyond the biblical Catholicism I followed his blend of science and Eastern religion closely. I was fascinated. I became a teacher of Transcendental Meditation, the Science of Creative Intelligence and later a Governor of the Age of Enlightenment (a practitioner of Patanjali's yoga sutras) -- a siddha. I spent three hours a day for decades in meditation and spiritual practice. I attended six weeks long advanced training classes of in Fairfield, Iowa to deepen my meditation experiences and add advanced techniques to my routine. I attended classes at Maharishi International University given by faculty from Stanford, Cal-Berkeley, Temple, MIT, and the most liberal of the small liberal arts campuses in America. Eventually, in an attempt to solve my intellectual dilemma, I pursued and was granted a Ph. D. myself from Kansas University in geography that focused on the role of consciousness in geographical knowing, dedicated to Maharishi. I've got some bona fides in this area.
Married to an ardent Methodist woman, I went to church and Sunday school throughout this time. She went to seminary and became a Methodist pastor. At her suggestion, I took a 34 week intensive bible study offered through Cokesbury called Disciple Bible Study. There, after a close reading of the scriptures and the following year of teaching the same course to others, I discovered the full truth of Jesus Christ and the Trinity, stopped my meditation practices and Vedic studies and followed Him. I have accepted the reality espoused by the apostles who saw him dead and resurrected. He is my Lord and my God. I am His disciple and a disciple of none other. He is the one True God-man, the fleshly expression of the Triune God. Buddha and Mohammed were men. Hinduism makes everything and everyone a god. Judaism and Christianity are the expression of the god of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Mohammed altered the Torah to create his doctrine of salvation by works alone. In doing so, he abandoned Yahweh.
We live in a time of syncretism and heresy for the sake of harmonious cultural relativism. The bumper sticker composed of the symbols of world religions to form the word "coexist" is the tune we are asked to march to in America. It is no harmony. It furthers the impression that all religions are equally true and keeps dialog civil at the cost of abandoning the Great Commission. How can you make disciples of all people when you are busy kow-towing to their mistakes. With this "peace forest" approach, we place Christ in the context of the primacy of peace, subordinating His message. But, Jesus came to bring a sword. He came to turn brother against sister, child against parent. He would not like us making an idol of Shalom. He is a jealous God, and would burn that forest. Remember Elijah on Mt. Carmel?
Labels: Buddhism, Elijah, God, Islam, Jesus, Mt. Carmel, Shalom
2 Comments:
At 1:27 PM, September 27, 2010, Anonymous said…
Anyone who follows this sad and pitiful misrepresentation of Christianity...."But, Jesus came to bring a sword. He came to turn brother against sister, child against parent. ..... He is a jealous God,"..... has obviously been taken over by demons. Keep clear.
At 9:52 AM, September 28, 2010, Unknown said…
Matthew 10: 33-35 has been excised from Anonymous bible. Here's what Jesus said:
34"Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. 35 For I have come to turn
" 'a man against his father,
a daughter against her mother,
a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law -
The intent of the post is not to define Christianity, but to point out a flaw in the claim that we all worship the same god. Those who think we do don't know the scriptures.
Shallow thinking ignores the context of the quote. This is useful if the gospel you follow is the "new" gospel of tolerance, which was the focus of my comment.
Bless you, Anonymous, for giving me an opportunity to further make my point.
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