Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Original Monotheism, Special Revelation and other Scriptures

(Originally written April 11, 2007 in Book 15)

Subsequent Reaction to Schmidt & Original Monotheism

Whether or not one accepts Schmidt's theory it is no longer possible to strictly adhere to an evolutionary theory of religion in light of Schmidt's anthropological evidence.

The most common reaction to Schmidt is to reject his conclusions on an idealogical basis.

Joseph M. Kitasawa claims that while historical evidence is good in the origin theory, any religion's origin is ultimately answerable with metaphysical answers.

Others, like many post-modernists, including David Adams Leeming, claim that religion arises out of a specific social context. Historical investigation is wholly absent from this type of analysis.

Raffaele Pettazzoni attempts to bridge the gap of extreme historistic theories and purely a historical phenomenology. He gave history its due place, but did not draw such strong conclusions as Schmidt.

Pettazzoni maintained that the Supreme god of primitive cultures did not constitute monotheistic religion because that god was a creator and sustainer god, but a remote god nonetheless. He argued that only reform from polytheism could lead to true monotheism.

Summary

There is good reason to believe that religion began with the awareness of a single, creator God.

The God of original monotheism is identical to the God of Scripture in his basic attributes.

The persistence of monotheism can be attributed to the historical continuity with the awareness of God by the first human beings and its reinforcement in general revelation.

General revelation has two dimensions:
1) An intuitive one
2) A rational one

Both yield:
1) Knowledge of the existence of God
2) Knowledge of God's attributes
3) Knowledge of a fundamental moral sense

Chapter 3 - Special Revelation and Non-Christian Scriptures

Christianity maintains that special revelation is located in the Old Testament and New Testament, as well as in Jesus Christ himself.

There are many non-Christian scriptures, but the nature of Scripture is radically different in each religion.

Corduan's "The Protestant Fallacy" is reading other religions' scriptures as one would read the Christian Scriptures. Since scriptural nature varies from religion to religion there can be no single way of reading or regarding Scriptures. One cannot assume the role of Scripture in any religion is identical to the role of Scripture in Christianity.

The Protestant Fallacy

Classical Protestantism holds that the Bible is the literal Word of God and thus, the text is inspired by God.

Protestantism asserts "sola scriptura". That is, there is no other source for propositional revelation other than the Bible.

Protestant Christianity is an "extremely book-bound form of religion" (Corduan, 57-58).

Protestant Christianity stands or falls by Scriptural assertions.

The Protestant fallacy is applying this "sola scriptura" mentality (which is appropriate for the Bible) to other religion's scriptures.

Judaism: The Deuterocanon as key to the Canon

The Protestant fallacy manifests itself when one assumes that to understand Judaism one must simply study the Old Testament.

This can lead to assertions like, "since the Jews no longer perform the ritual sacrifices they are required by their own scriptures, Judaism is internally incoherent".

The Scriptures of Judaism are identical with the Old Testament Canon of Christianity. These books are known in Judaism as the Tanak (TNK).

The Tanak is an acronym based on the Hebrew names of the three divisions of writings:
1) the Law - Torah
2) the Prophets - Nebiim
3) the Writings - Ketubim

When Jerusalem fell in A.D. 70 the Jews began writing down the interpretations of the Tanak which had been entirely oral before.

The Mishnah was produced around A.D. 500. Later, the Talmud was produced.

Since the production of the Talmud, all Judaism is Talmudic Judaism.

Orthodox Judaism holds that the Talmud, though not inspired, is expendable, but not revisable.

Other sects of Judaism, like Cabalistic movements accepted the Zohar as a supplement, but not a replacement, to the Talmud.

While the Tanak is the only Scripture in Judaism, all governance of life is done via the Talmud.

The Jewish Scriptures (for better or worse) must be interpreted through the lens of the Talmud.

Islam: The Qur'an as Event

The Qur'an is the compilation of what was revealed to Muhammad.

The Qur'an is merely excerpts from God's full book in heaven, the umm-al-kitub.

Muslims believe the Qur'an is as it is exactly as it was when it was revealed to Muhammad.

Despite its lofty place in Islam, the Qur'an was supplemented easy on by another book. The Hadith is a collection of the acts and sayings of Muhammad.

While the Hadith is not considered to be revealed like the Qur'an, it is nonetheless as binding as the Qur'an.

The value of the Qur'an within Islam has little to do with its content. The value lies in its very occurrence.

The Qur'an is utterly pristine, whereas other men's revelatory books like Moses' Law, David's Psalms and Jesus' Gospels while being products of revelation were distorted by their followers.

TO recognize the Qur'an is more important than to read it.

The Qur'an is not a human book at all; whereas, the Bible is wholly human and wholly divine.

Muslims believe that the Qur'an mediates God's presence into their lives.

Even in non-Arabic speaking countries the Qur'an is devoutly recited in Arabic. Recitation of the Qur'an is the most important function of the Qur'an in the Muslim community.

Zoroastrianism: A Ritual Accumulation

Similar to the Bible, the canon of Zoroastrianism is a collection of works spanning many centuries.

The Zoroastrianism Scripture is called the Avesta.

The oldest part of the Avesta is the Yasna, which contains hymns called the Gathas, some of which date back to Zoroaster (6th century B.C.).

The Videvdat is the newest part of the Avesta and dates from when Zoroastrianism was the State religion of Iran (A.D. 226 - 637).

The Avesta is not a great source for authoritative information about Zoroastrianism because the language is so impenetrable.

The language of the Gathas is called Avesta because it is simply so different from any other languages.

"One scholar of Iranian religion [H.S. Nybers] has maintained that the Gathas are so difficult to understand because they are intentional gibberish" (Corduan, 62).

Even in the Zoroastrian community, the Avesta is not supposed to be a source of information.

The Avesta is a ritual text used to recite as worship and purification.

Sikhism: A day in the Life of the Book

The Adi Granth is the Scripture of Sikhism.

Nanak (1469-1539) founded Sikhism as a way to bridge Hinduism and Islam. He taught that there is only one God whose nature lies beyond human reason and religious imagery.

Nanak was considered a holy guru by his followers. He was then followed by 9 other holy gurus, each seen as the embodiment of divine light.

Arjan Dev, the 5th Guru compiled all his and the previous gurus' chants and hymns into the Adi Granth.

Gobind Singh (1666-1708) the 10th and final guru, declared that there would be no more gurus and the Adi Granth would be the guru forever more.

From then on the book itself, which is displayed in the Golden Shrine of Amritsa has been recognized as true and binding by all Sikhs.

The Adi Granth is the very embodiment of God.

The Adi Granth functions in two ways:
1) It is the hymn book of the congregation
2) It is venerated as the holy guru.

The actual book is put to sleep in a bed at night and woken up and placed on an altar each morning.

"The basic function of the Adi Granth is an object of veneration, not as a record of revelation" (Corduan, 65).

Baha'i : A Canon Plus a Canon

Baha'i is a young religion founded by Baha'ullah.

Baha'ullah is considered to be a manifestation of God. He was the 9th manifestation after Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus, Muhammad, the Bab and Baha'ullah.

Baha'ullah taught that all these other prophets had inspired writings and that his own writings complete the canon of world Scriptures for the time being.

The Baha'i Scriptures should be read in a similar fashion as the Protestant Christian Bible is, but the Baha'i Scriptures are paralleled by all the other 8 world Scriptures, whereas the Bible stands alone.

Hinduism: A Protean Canon

Eastern religions have sacred texts in a very different way then to Western religions, especially Christianity.

Hindu sacred texts are divided into two groups:
1) The Shruti
2) The Smriti

The Shruti are "seen", they were directly revealed to the semi-divine rishis of old who passed them down.

The Smriti are "heard", they are merely passed down as tradition only.

Shruti:
- Vedas
- Brahmanas
- Upanishads

Smriti:
- Ramayana
- Mahabharata
- Bhagavad Gita

The Smriti are epic poems and the deuterocanon, while the canon is the Vedic complex.

The distinction is much more ambiguous in reality then in theory.

Buddhism: Canon by Selection

Two major books:
1) Poli Canon
2) Lotus Sutra

The Poli Canon contains the Tripitaka (Three Baskets) and is the oldest Buddhist writings.

The Tripitaka is associated with the older, more traditional form of Buddhism, Theravada Buddhism.

The Lotus Sutra is associated with the more recent and more innovative form of Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism.

Chinese and Japanese Religions

Scriptures and Canon are not easily adapted for Far East Religions.

Religion/Scriptures

Daoism - The Doodejing & the Zhuangzi
Confucianism - The Analects
Shinto - The Kojiki, the Nihong and the Amatsu Narito

The Daodejing contains the wisdom of Lao Tzu, the founder of Daoism.

The Zhuangzi is a collection of anecdotal essays by the teacher Laozi (but probably not the same Laozi/Lao-Tzu)

The Analects is the teachings of Confucius.

The Kojiki is the official Japanese traditional myth. The Nihangi is a supplement to the Kojiki. The Amatsu Nihong is a book of standard prayers and rituals of Shinto.

The Singularity of the Christian Scriptures

The Christian Scriptures is different from all other Scriptures and all Scriptures are unique in their own way.

All Scriptures contain some truths, if truth is meant as that which corresponds to reality.

However, if truth is understood under the coherence theory of truth rather than the correspondence theory of truth then no religions can share truth because they will be truths from differing systems.

Cornelius van Til argued that even knowledge of a flower is different for a Christian and non-Christian. To the Christian, a flower is the creation of a personal God whereas it is a product of chance formation of matter to a non-Christian.

Other Scriptures also contain some wisdom. They also contain some religious truths.

That said, the Bible is sufficient. All we (as Christians) have is the Bible and all we need is the Bible.

There is no deuterocannon in Christianity.

Religious truths in other Scriptures can only be duplications of revealed truths in the Bible.

Other Scriptures do not contain special revelation. But other Scriptures can have a basis in general revelation.


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