Truth is, I’m kind of scared about the Truth
And everybody wants to make the sense out of it
Some, with rationality
Others, with pure—if not blind—faith
Some are enough with what’s here
Others are craving for what’s beyond there
I believe in both, the so called
Rational-logic
And the ‘inner’-logic
A logic that enables you to see beyond
We tried, and it makes sense, for us
Despite the limitation that we have (for now)
in seeing and understanding the beyond
in seeing and understanding the beyond
And honestly I’m a little bit scared
Because we would keep on asking
And deep inside I’m scared if we come
to the point where we understand
the Truth
and that it all makes sense
There was a writer (I think it was Borges) who was talking
about another writer (yes, I’m bad at remembering names for references) who
wrote this story about a person who met God.
God offered him two things: The Answer on the right hand;
and paths to find The Answer on the left hand.
(Let’s just all assume that this God is an anthropomorphic
god)
That person chose the left hand.
Reza Aslan, a brilliant scholar on Religion, said this
beautiful thing in his interview with Cenk Uygur, the host of The Young Turks,
which is accessible on Youtube:
Q: "As a historian and a scholar, as you read all of this… How can you still believe in any of this religion?"
Q: "As a historian and a scholar, as you read all of this… How can you still believe in any of this religion?"
A: “I don’t believe in religion— I believe in God. The only reason why I call myself a Muslim, is because the symbols and metaphors that Islam uses to talk about God are the ones that I like, the ones that makes sense to me. It’s not like Islam is more true than Christianity or Christianity is more true than Judaism. They are all equally true, equally valid ways of expressing what is absolutely inexpressible.
If you believe that there’s something beyond the material
world, that there is something truly transcendent, then you need some kind of
language to talk about it—to make sense of it. That’s all that religion is.
Anyone who says ‘I believe in Christianity’ or ‘I believe in Islam’ misses the
point. Christianity and Islam are not things to believe—they are signposts to
God. They are a means to an end, not an end in itself.”
“It’s a simple proposition. You either believe that there’s
something beyond the material world or you do not. If you do not, fine.
If you do, then do you actually want to experience it,
commune with it or do you not? If you do not, fine.
If you do, then you need some help. You need a way to
express what is fundamentally indefinable.
And that’s all religion does—it gives you language to express it.
Anything more than that, then you’re missing the point of what religion is.
The great Christian mystic, Meister Eckhart, once said, ‘if
you focus too narrowly on a single path to God, all that you can find is the
path.’”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HL6E4eMX-4k
(near the end of the video, about the last 3-4 minutes, where the rest of the
video is about his book, which is really interesting as well)
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