[Vision2020] Happy 140th BD Mahatma Gandhi on Oct. 2
nickgier at roadrunner.com
nickgier at roadrunner.com
Tue Sep 30 16:05:56 PDT 2008
Hail to the Vision!
I'm taking a break from writing about the election to celebrate Gandhi's 140th birthday. Below is my column for the week and attached is the text of my keynote talk at San Diego State on Thursday. In addition to my talk there will be Indian food and Indian dancing.
Nick Gier
Gandhi and Religious Pluralism
By Nick Gier
There are basically two responses one can take to the rich diversity within the world's great religions. Many religious conservatives maintain that their religion is the only true faith and that the others are false. Fundamentalists go further to declare spiritual war on all other religions, some insisting that physical combat will be necessary.
Muslims jihadists raising AK-47s in the air are dramatic examples of this. Just as alarming, however, is Lt. Gen. William Boykin, who, in full dress uniform in front of evangelical congregations, said this of a Somali war lord: “I knew that my God was bigger than his. I knew that my God was a real God and his was an idol.” Equally troubling is Ed Kalnins, Sarah Palin's former pastor, who, with reference to Iraq, stated that Jesus operates "from that position of war mode."
The second option to religious diversity is the liberal one. Historically, religious liberals were instrumental in establishing freedom of religion in the liberal democracies of the world. The religious liberal believes that there is some value in every religion, and that people should celebrate any common ground they can find.
Problems arise, however, when we attempt to define that common ground. When the Rev. John Henry Barrows opened the 1893 World Parliament of Religions, he blithely assumed that the delegates shared "the blessed truths of divine Fatherhood." Although always polite and dignified, Buddhist, Hindu, and Confucian representatives still made it clear that they did not embrace this belief.
More often, however, religious liberals have defined the common ground as an impersonal Godhead from which all the various personal gods are but manifestations. The most famous exponent of this view is Aldous Huxley, whose book The Perennial Philosophy, although drawing on mystics all over the world, still has a very definite Asian bias.
Religious morality and laws based on it are one of the greatest contributions of the world's religions. It seems reasonable then to bring the world's religions together under moral categories such as justice, nonviolence, tolerance, and compassion. Insisting that "there is no such thing as religion overriding morality," Gandhi states that "true religion and true morality are inseparably bound up with each other."
Gandhi was fond of claiming that the two statements "God is Truth" and "Truth is God" are convertible. He came to prefer the latter over the former because there is far less dispute about the existence of truth than about the existence of God. Holding that “Truth is God” also avoids the destructive ways in which personal gods have been used to wage wars and further national goals.
Gandhi believed that truth is a virtue, the virtue of being true to one’s self. One can do this only be constantly testing one's self in many different situations. To find truth people have to rely on their consciences, the "still, small voices" within them. In order to prevent the appeal to false conscience, the person must follow the utmost discipline and have a pure heart.
While Gandhi believed that truth is absolute, individual views of it will always be “relative, many-sided, and plural.” Gandhi learned this from his Jain friends, followers of an ancient Indian religion that was the first to preach the doctrine of non-violence.
The Jains' most famous parable is the story of the five blind women and the elephant. By grabbing on to one part of the elephant, each woman would know something true about the animal but that truth would only be partial.
Gandhi once said that “I very much like this Jain doctrine of the many-sidedness of reality. It is this doctrine that has taught me to judge a Muslim from his own standpoint and a Christian from his. Formerly I used to resent the ignorance of my opponents. Today I can love them because I am gifted with the eye to see myself as others see me and vice versa.” Gandhi also said that “I’ve broadened my Hinduism by loving other religions as my own.”
Gandhi did not foresee nor favor a single religion dominating the world, and he did not want people to convert to other faiths. Just as the Dalai Lama is now telling his non-Buddhist admirers, Gandhi insisted that people find value and spiritual sustenance in their own faith traditions: they "should adhere to their own faiths more strictly and pay greater attention to their moral teaching."
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