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Politics : Should God be replaced?

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To: James Calladine who wrote (8553)12/6/2001 9:35:20 AM
From: Bill Fischofer  Read Replies (2) of 28931
 
Re: Revelation

I would agree with the statement that we are unable to experience God without God's revelation to us. But I don't view that as a problem because God is continuously in "revelation" to us in countless ways. The hallmark of most organized religion is that they all seem to agree on two points:

1. God spoke to man in the past
2. God stopped doing this

Thus the claim is that God must now be sought only in holy books or via institutions, their rituals, and their anointed officials. By safely locking God away from direct experience religion thus ensures a perpetual role for itself which is why religions are so amazingly durable.

This worldview follows naturally from viewing revelation as an event. If one views revelation, like life, as a process then a different worldview will result. That is the key difference between religion and spirituality. Religions try to make a dynamic process static by capturing and codifying a snapshot of that process which occured long ago while ignoring the living process of revelation which is all around us and always with us.
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