Mar
How To Find The Truths In Religion
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So last week, I wrote a post about the Truths in religion, and my friend Leo of Zen Habits asked me, “What’s in it for me?” “How does this help me in my life? Yeah, it’s inspirational, but how do I find the Truth in religion?” Then I went to the Open Secrets book study last night, and one of the guys said that religions don’t tell you how to find God, they just pound into your head their version of what God is.
Not wanting to be one of the religious nuts, and wanting to provide value to my readers, I’ve come up with a few ways to find the Truths in religion.
1. Be open.
Before you set out on your journey, you need to open yourself up. It’s a risky endeavour you’re about to undertake, but you can’t find the Truth if you don’t open yourself up to some ambiguity. You’ll be on shifty territory for some time. No need to be afraid, the thing that you are seeking is seeking you. You will find it, but you have to remain a bit vulnerable and open.
2. Talk to your friends.
If you have friends of different religious backgrounds, talk to them. If you don’t, make some. In the U.S. there’s an unwritten rule that you shouldn’t talk about sex, politics, or religion, I break it everyday. Interestingly, people love talking about themselves, even their religion. Here are a few questions you might want to ask:
- How do you think the world started?
- If I wanted to become a (fill in the blank) what would I have to do?
- Do you believe everything about your religion?
- What text do you use? Do you read it literally?
- What are a few of your favorite religious stories?
- How often do you worship?
It sure beats weather stories
3. Visit places of worship.
Visit an Islamic mosque, or a Jewish synagogue, or a Hindu temple. Go to an Evangelical revival, or a Catholic mass. When you visit, take in the rituals. Engage and participate in the full experience. Pay close attention to the message of the spiritual leader. Sift through the dogma to find the kernel of Truth.
For example, one of my friends is married to a Southern baptist minister. I visited his church one Wednesday for Bible study. I was apprehensive at first, but I wanted to be supportive of my friend. The passage they were studying was the first part of Genesis. His talk was on the fall of man, but he couldn’t help but say that we are children of God. That resonated with me.
4. Read about religions.
For a quick start visit, the Wikipedia entries for the major religions and follow the links down the rabbit hole.
Huston Smith’s The World’s Religions, is the text used in most Universities to talk about comparative religion. It gives a summary on the origination, myths, and cultures surrounding most of the religions (not individual denominations) in the world. With a basic understanding of the ideas behind religions, you can draw your own conclusions on the similarities.
The History of God by Karen Armstrong explores how we have made God in our own image rather than the other way around. It shows how our perception and understanding of God morphed over the past 4000 years. It’s a great book if you want to find the common thread among Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
World Scripture edited by the International Religious Foundation gives a side by side comparison of religious texts surrounding different themes. This is not an easy read, but a great reference if you want to see what all the religions have to say about a particular theme, like say creation.
5. Look for common threads.
While you are experiencing and reading about different religions, look for common threads. Those are keys to Truths. Most religions, for example, say that we come from God. They might say we are children of God and fell from grace, or that we came out of God, but decided to live in the material realm, or that we are incarnations of God. Search for the similarities among the various religions, there you will find the Truths.
6. Go within.
In the end, the Truths taught by religions are held within you. Trust yourself to discern what fits for you. A word of caution though, while your mind is great for dealing with objective facts, it will run around in circles in an attempt to logically understand Truth (whatever that means for you). It’s not that Truth defies logic, it’s just that it might defy logic today given the tools and information that we have available to us.
In Spirit,
Nneka


March 27th, 2007 at 8:21 pm
[...] How to Find the Truths in Religion [...]
August 20th, 2007 at 9:59 pm
[...] Finally, from Nneka at Balanced Life Centre, I just had to include How To Find The Truths In Religion. [...]
August 21st, 2007 at 1:56 am
Nneka, I see that we share some common thoughts about religion. I usually hesitate to discuss religion with most people here in the South where I live because my view of religion has been called weird by even some of my own family. Even as a child, I knew that there was more to God than what my grandmothers’ churches were teaching me. One of my grandmothers was Baptist. The other was Assembly of God. My parents didn’t go to church except for weddings and funerals. When I got married, it was to a young man who grew up in the Church of Christ so when I finally joined a religion the first time, it was in a Church of Christ. That church suited my needs for awhile but I still knew that there was more to God than I was being taught. Every church that I have ever attended had a much more limited view of God that I have intuitively had all of my life. Since then, I have studied a little bit of Buddhism and a little bit of Hinduism with the wisdom of a small Unity church thrown in. With each religion, I have gained a larger image of my God. As I grow spiritually, my image of God also grows and changes. I believe that is as it should be for each of us. Thanks for opening this discussion.
August 22nd, 2007 at 11:09 am
My pleasure Patricia
If we take a look at the stories and message in every religion, we will find that they are the same. What changes is the method of delivery and the list of rules that man has attached to the essence of all of them.