“Find God is like finding your way to the top of a mountain. There are many ways to get there.”
In
one form or another, this is the view many in our culture have about religions.
There are many of them, but they are all attempting to do the same
thing-find God. They are all true
but different ways of reaching the Divine. But can this be rue?
Can all paths lead to God?
Is it true that we live in an age of religious
pluralism? “Pluraslim” simply
means the condition of having more than one, and it is a fact that we have more
than one religion. Whether we’re
referring to the condition in America in 1996 A.D. or Israel in 30 A.D.
religions have been, and are plentiful. As
a matter of fact, not since the days of Jesus have so many religions flourished
together. Here in America, for
example, there are currently over one-and-a-half million Hindus, four-million
Muslims, five-million Buddhists and ten-million Jews.1
Besides these major religions, there are over thirty-million who
subscribe to some form of the New Age Movement,2
and many who hold to Mormonism, Spiritism, Christian Science, Jehovah’s
Witnesses, and a host of other sects. To
deny religious pluralism in our day is to deny reality.
This reality can be called the “fact of religious pluralism.”
However, many people have unwittingly bought into a
certain philosophical interpretation which has been offered about this fact.
Since there are so many different regions and so many sincere devotees in
each of them, it is argued, they must all be “true” to those who believe
them. For the sincere Christian, Christianity is true.
For the sincere Muslim, Islam is true.
For the sincere Mormon, the Mormon religion is true.
As the saying goes, “You have your truth and I have my truth.”
This interpretation can be called “religious relativism,” and it
simply means that all religions are true-true to the person-for all religions
ultimately lead one to God
This view runs contrary to the Christian Scriptures which declare that
there is “only one way to salvation” (John 14:6; Act 4:12).
But such an exclusive claim, it is maintained, sound dogmatic,
narrow-minded, and intolerant,3
Maybe Christianity was the only way of salvation for followers of Christ in 30
A.D., but we have had many prophets since him in many different cultures and
time periods. Surely god would not
just pick one culture in which to manifest Himself—God is big enough to work
through any culture. As one Hindu
puts it:
Religion is like a large elephant
surrounded by several blind men. One
man touches his tail and thinks it’s a rope.
Another touches his trunk and thinks it’s a snake.
Another touches his leg and thinks it’s a tree.
Yet another touches his side and thinks it’s a wall.
They are all experiencing the same elephant, but are experiencing him in
very different ways. The same goes
for God and the various religions.
But, while this interpretation may sound nice in our
pluralistic, tolerant age, is it possible?
Can all religions be true?
Religious relativism is based on a relative view of truth.
In order to determine whether or not all religion can be true, then, an understanding of the nature of truth is essential.
First, truth can be understood as either relative or absolute, and this
in two ways.4
It can be understood as relative
to time and place and/or persons, or as absolute
to time and place and/or persons. Consider
the following statement: “I feel sick.”
Now if Joyce is really sick. So
the statement, “I fell sick,” is true for her.
But suppose Joyce’s friend Brenda is not sick.
Is this statement, “I feel sick,” true for Brenda?
No. Thus, it is maintained,
truth is relative to persons. The
same statement can be true for one person and not true for another person.
Consider another example. Suppose
that someone makes the following statement:
“The president is from Arkansas.”
Is this statement true? Yes,
if by “president” one is referring to the president of the United States in
the years 1992-1996. But that same
statement made about the president of the United States in 1990 would also be
false. Thus, it is maintained, truth is relative to time and relative to place.
Since truth is relative, argue religious relativist, one person can have
her religion and another can have his religion, and both of them can have the
truth. However, if this is the
case, a profound problem emerges.
The arguments given above for religious relativism are based on a
relative view of truth. However,
truth cannot be relative, either regarding persons or time and place, and a
careful analysis to the above examples will demonstrate this.5
It was argued above that a particular statement, such as “I feel
sick,” is relative to persons, and statement, “The president is from
Arkansas,” is relative to time and place.
However, while the statements are relative to persons, and to time and place, truth
itself is not relative. The
distinction is difficult to grasp at first, but grasping it is extremely
important. In order to grasp it,
though, a basis understanding of truth and logic is essential.
There are basically three theories of truth: the Pragmatic Theory, the
Coherence Theory, and the Correspondence Theory.6
The Pragmatic Theory of truth is the view that “truth” is what is
expedient of useful; truth is that which works. For example, if it has helped one’s family to be members of
the Mormon religion, then Mormonism is true for them. Many Mormons argue in just this way. However, it is not only Mormons who hold to a pragmatic view
truth. Many Americans today,
especially those of college age, hold to some form of the pragmatic view.7
The Coherence Theory of truth is another view held by many today.
This is the view that something is true if it coheres with one’s belief
which one has, then that particular belief is true.
Fore example, if one believes that the Bible is the Word of God, then if
asked whether it is true that all believers will rise from the dead, the answer
would be yes. It is “true” for
the person who believes that the Bible is the Work of God that believers will
rise from the dead. But it is not
true for those who believe that the Bible is myth that “believers will rise
from the dead,” is true for one person and not true for another.
The third view is the Correspondence Theory.
This has been the standard view of truth throughout most of history.
Simply put, it is the view that a statement is true if it corresponds to
reality. For example, if one says
that it is true that all believer will rise from the dead, this means more than
that it is useful for one to believe it. It
also means more than that it coheres with the rest of one’s beliefs.
It means that someday believers really will rise from the dead, whether
anyone believes the Bible is God’s Word or not!
A little reflection at this point is necessary.
First, it should be noted that the Pragmatic Theory and the Coherence
Theory both include a relative view of truth.
Regarding the pragmatic view, Mormonism may work for one person, and
Islam for another. But if truth is
what works, then Mormonism is true for the other.
So the Pragmatic Theory includes a relative view of truth.
Second, regarding the Coherence Theory, one person may have a set of
beliefs that, while internally consistent, contradicts another person’s
internally consistent set of beliefs. A
Jehovah Witness may believe that Jesus is the archangel Michael and this view
may be internally consistent with the
rest of his beliefs. And a Oneness
Pentecostal may believe that Jesus is the Father, and that may cohere
with the rest of his belief. If
truth is understood as that which coheres with one’s set of beliefs, then both
the JW and the Oneness Pentecostal have the truth.
So the Coherence Theory also includes a relative view of truth.
Now, the problem with both the Pragmatic Theory and the Coherence Theory,
and any relative theory of truth for that matter, is that they deny one of the
central laws of logic-the law of Noncontradiction-and to deny this law is to
commit intellectual suicide.
One of the central laws of logic is the Law of Noncontradiction.
Simply put, this is the notion that A cannot equal non-A. For example, the Capitol Building cannot both exist and not
exist in the same way at the same time. Either
it exists or it does not. If one
tries to deny this law, one has to use the law in the process of denying it.
Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias has demonstrated this point best in a
dialogue he had with a professor of philosophy of religion.8
In his dialogue, Ravi noted this point that one cannot deny the law
without using it. The professor stated that Ravi was thinking from a Western
perspective, and needed to open up his mind and see how those in the East think.
Instead of thinking in terms of either/or, Easterners thins in terms of
both/and. Thus, for the Easterner, the law of Noncontradiction is not
true
However, the professor used the law in this attempt
to deny it. This is how he did it.
If one denies the Law of Noncontradiction, one is saying that the law is
not true. However, by saying that
it is not true, one is saying that it is “not A,” “A” now being the Law
of Noncontradiction. The professor
was arguing that one should believe the “both/and”view rather than the
“either/or” view. But this is
equivalent to saying that of EITHER the “both/and” OR the “either/or”
views, the “both/and”view is true. The
professor used the “either/or” view in his attempt to deny the
“either/or” view. In philosophy
this is called a self-stultifying or self-refuting proposition.
Its like saying in English, “I cannot speak a work of English.”9
It is impossible to deny the Law of Noncontradiction without using the
Law of Noncontradicion.
What has this proven? Well, if truth is relative, then it denies the Law of
Noncontradiction. For example, if
truth is what works (the Pragmatic Theory), and what works for one person is
contrary to what works for another person, then tow contradictory views are both
true. Also, fi truth is what
coheres to a set of beliefs (the Coherence Theory).
And what coheres for one person is contrary to what coheres for another
person, then again tow contradictory views are both true.
But this is impossible for it denies the Law of Noncontradiction.
If two views are contrary, either one is true or both of them are false,
they cannot both be true. Thus,
both the Pragmatic Theory and the Coherence Theory are ultimately self-refuting.
This leaves only the Correspondence Theory.
But what has all of this to do with whether or not all religions lead to
God?
First, truth is absolute, both regarding time and
place and regarding person. Truth
is what corresponds to reality. When
Joyce is sick and she says, “I fell sick,” it is true for all person at all
time periods and at all places that she is sick.
While the same statement can be used by others, when Joyce says “I am
sick,” what is implicit is that she is sick at the time she says it.
The same goes for the statement that “The president is from
Arkansas.” Truth, then, is
absolute and cannot be relative, for to be so would be to deny the most basic of
all logical laws.
Second, as noted earlier, there is a philosophical
interpretation of religious pluralism, prominent in our culture, called
religious relativism. It is the
view that all religions are true. For
the religious relativist, truth is understood in a relativistic way, either by
holding to the Pragmatic Theory of truth or to the Coherence Theory of truth.
However, since both of these theories include a relativistic view of
truth, they both deny the Law of Noncontradiction.
But, as just demonstrated, to deny this law is to refute oneself. Thus, to hold to religious relativism is to refute oneself
and to commit intellectual suicide.
It has been argued that there is a fact of religious pluralism and a
fiction of religious pluralism. The
fact is that there simply are many coexisting religions.
TO deny this is to deny reality. The
fiction is that they are all true that they are all leading to God. Since they contradict each other, they cannot all be true,
for truth is that which is absolute and corresponds to reality.
If Mormonism is true, then there really are many gods overseeing other
planets in our universe. But if that is true, then Islam cannot be true, for it holds
that there is only one God, Allah. But
if Islam is true, then Christianity cannot be true, for Christianity holds that
Jesus rose from the dead and now reigns at the right hand of the Father.
Islam denies this. All religions contradict each other. They cannot then all be true, for that would deny the Law of
Noncontradiction, which is impossible. Either
one of them is true or all of them are false.
Which religion then is true? This
is an important question, but in our pluralistic relativistic age, understanding
the nature of truth must come before understanding which religion is true.W
1 For current statistics regarding many of the major religions, see The Universal Almanac for 1996 and the information Please Almanac for 1996.
2 Russell Chandler, Understanding the New Age Movement (Dallas Word, 1988, p 20.)
3 Christian philosopher of religion Harold Netland puts it this way: “Clearly, Christian exclusivism has fallen upon hard times. Not only is it being rejected by non-Christians as naïve and arrogant, but it is increasingly being criticized from within the Christian community as well for alleged intolerance and for being a vestige of an immoral religious imperialism.” Dissonant Voices (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991, p 27.)
4 For a helpful analysis of truth in religion, see Mortimer Adler, Truth in Religion: The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1990). See also Netland Dissonant Voices, especially. Chap.4.
5 For a concise argument against relativism, which includes an exposition of several theories of truth, see Frederick F. Schmitt, Truth: A Primer (Oxford: Westview Press, 1995).
6 For a very helpful overview of several theories of truth, see Norman Geisler and Ron Brooks, When Skeptics Ask (Wheaton, IL: Victor Brooks, 1990 chap.12) For an advanced exposition and critique of the carious theories of truth, see Richard L. Kirkham, Theories of Truth: A Critical Introduction (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992)
7 Regarding this pragmatic, relative view of truth, professor Allan Bloom says the following: “There in one thing a professor can be absolutely certain of : almost every student entering the university believes, or says he believes, that truth is relative.” See The closing of the American Mind, (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987, p 25.)
8 Ravi has communicated this story at numerous Veritas Forums.
9
If a thinking relativist attempts to respond to this argument by saying that
both the “either/or” and the
“both/and” can be true, a similar response follows.
For if both the “either/or” and the “both/and” views are true
then this is contrary to just the “either/or” view being true. In other words, either
both the “either/or” view and the “both/and” view or just the
“either/or” view is true. Once
again, the Law of Noncontradiction emerges.
It is impossible to deny it without using it.