arthra
Baha'i
I was reviewing this interfaith discussion board and sharing board and noticed that sacred texts was "untenanted"... No posts...
For me this is an important topic.... How do we in our various religious traditions come about accepting a text as "sacred". There must be a variety depending of our approaches.
For me as a Baha'i any text that was written by a Messenger of God or as we Baha'is call Them.. Manifestation of God would be a sacred text.
Of course in the ancient world writing was not universal.. and so there were verbal traditions where the teachings of the Prophet or Messenger were passed down over the years or sometimes centuries... and in the passing you often have variable cultural inflections and sometimes whole different translations that you can find in a sacred text..
You also have in the life of a Messenger of God what are termed revelations.. so the text can be a product of revelation and there are descriptions of states of revelation. To quote an article on the subject from the Encyclopedia Britannica:
"Every great religion acknowledges revelation in the wide sense that its followers are dependent on the privileged insights of its founder or of the original group or individuals with which the faith began. These profound insights into the ultimate meaning of life and the universe, which have been handed down in religious traditions, are arrived at, it is believed, not so much through logical inference as through sudden, unexpected illuminations that invade and transform the human spirit."
revelation | religion
But having the revelation as an experience is only the beginning it seems to me ... You also have the issue of peoples' response to it... there's where the "fun" begins ... if you'll pardon my description...
Consider the following:
The [very] prophets, who are the pearls of the Ocean of Unity and the recipients of Divine Revelation, have [ever] been the objects of men's aversion and caviling; much more these servants. Even as He saith: 'Every nation schemed against their apostle to catch him. And they contended with falsehood therewith to refute the truth.'* So likewise He saith, 'There came not unto them any apostle but they mocked at him.'* Consider the appearance of the Seal of the Prophets, the King of the Elect (the soul of the worlds be His sacrifice); after the dawning of the Sun of Truth from the horizon of the Hijaz what wrongs befell that Manifestation of the Might of the Lord of Glory at the hands of the people of error! So heedless were men that they were wont to consider the vexation of that Holy One as one of the greatest of good works and as the means of approaching God Most High.
~ Abdu'l-Baha, A Traveller's Narrative, p. 73
So if we can share some of these issues about sacred texts and how they came to be regarded as such and what or how these texts can still "speak" to us... it would seem to be worthy of our time and effort!
For me this is an important topic.... How do we in our various religious traditions come about accepting a text as "sacred". There must be a variety depending of our approaches.
For me as a Baha'i any text that was written by a Messenger of God or as we Baha'is call Them.. Manifestation of God would be a sacred text.
Of course in the ancient world writing was not universal.. and so there were verbal traditions where the teachings of the Prophet or Messenger were passed down over the years or sometimes centuries... and in the passing you often have variable cultural inflections and sometimes whole different translations that you can find in a sacred text..
You also have in the life of a Messenger of God what are termed revelations.. so the text can be a product of revelation and there are descriptions of states of revelation. To quote an article on the subject from the Encyclopedia Britannica:
"Every great religion acknowledges revelation in the wide sense that its followers are dependent on the privileged insights of its founder or of the original group or individuals with which the faith began. These profound insights into the ultimate meaning of life and the universe, which have been handed down in religious traditions, are arrived at, it is believed, not so much through logical inference as through sudden, unexpected illuminations that invade and transform the human spirit."
revelation | religion
But having the revelation as an experience is only the beginning it seems to me ... You also have the issue of peoples' response to it... there's where the "fun" begins ... if you'll pardon my description...
Consider the following:
The [very] prophets, who are the pearls of the Ocean of Unity and the recipients of Divine Revelation, have [ever] been the objects of men's aversion and caviling; much more these servants. Even as He saith: 'Every nation schemed against their apostle to catch him. And they contended with falsehood therewith to refute the truth.'* So likewise He saith, 'There came not unto them any apostle but they mocked at him.'* Consider the appearance of the Seal of the Prophets, the King of the Elect (the soul of the worlds be His sacrifice); after the dawning of the Sun of Truth from the horizon of the Hijaz what wrongs befell that Manifestation of the Might of the Lord of Glory at the hands of the people of error! So heedless were men that they were wont to consider the vexation of that Holy One as one of the greatest of good works and as the means of approaching God Most High.
~ Abdu'l-Baha, A Traveller's Narrative, p. 73
So if we can share some of these issues about sacred texts and how they came to be regarded as such and what or how these texts can still "speak" to us... it would seem to be worthy of our time and effort!