E
Elioenai26
Guest
The mind of a man is that organ by which he assimilates and filters data which is input by his five senses and stored in his heart. This can be likened unto a water treatment facility in which various sources of water, some clean, and some very putrid and rank must enter into for the purposes of filtration, purification, and the elimination of all that is toxic so that pure potable water is stored in various holding silos for distribution to our taps and fountains for drinking.
The enlightened relativist, as he no doubt sees himself, boasts that he is "open minded" and accepts all religions and philosophies and worldviews as being simply many paths to the same truth. He harbors this attitude with great satisfaction and boasts that he is the model of "tolerance". What he fails to realize, and this to his own hurt, is that he is no different than a vile sewer which receives all manner of filth from its many different sources. Sources such as untreated rain water, sewage from septic tanks and toilets, and a whole slew of unimaginable filth. Like a sewer, he receives everything that comes his way, never bothering to test to see whether those things he hears and sees are true and therefore worthy of keeping in his heart. He never bothers to "filter" those sundry ideas he accepts as all being "pure".
Such a one has convinced himself there are no absolutes and that everything is relative. When someone does make a claim regarding truth, he quickly dismisses the claimant as being "intolerant", "bigoted", and "narrow minded". What he fails to realize is that he himself is a hypocrite. On one hand he says that all is relative and to each his own, and on the other, he excludes as intolerant, anyone who disagrees with his view! He says in so many words, that if you do not think as I do, you are wrong, and yet says that it is wrong to be exclusivistic! The duplicity here staggers the mind, and what is even more incredible is the amount of intelligent men and women who actually hold this position, all the while remaining ignorant to its obviously contradictory and hypocritical nature.
The so called "New Age Spirituality" movement championed by such well known figures as Oprah Winfrey and Deepak Chopra is replete with just such inconsistencies. It is a wonder indeed that their illogical teachings and contradictory views are so widely accepted as "truth" as they are.
It seems that the great need in our institutions of learning today is not that our children be taught that they are little more than advanced apes due to a time plus matter plus chance blind process of natural selection, but rather very simply, how to think logically and soundly!
It has been said that one of the chief aims of philosophy is to answer the question: "What is truth?" How can we endeavor to even set out on this journey with any confidence of reaching our destination if all we are taught is that "truth" really does not exist!
Relativism is simply not tenable nor livable. It is not practical and certainly not true. Its appeal must be in its "whatever feels good, then do it" mantra. Lust has a remarkable way of convincing us that pleasure supersedes truth in value.
If we desire true illumination we would do well to remember the Lord's exhortation to above all else, watch over our heart with all diligence, For from it flow the springs of life. Proverbs 4:23.
The enlightened relativist, as he no doubt sees himself, boasts that he is "open minded" and accepts all religions and philosophies and worldviews as being simply many paths to the same truth. He harbors this attitude with great satisfaction and boasts that he is the model of "tolerance". What he fails to realize, and this to his own hurt, is that he is no different than a vile sewer which receives all manner of filth from its many different sources. Sources such as untreated rain water, sewage from septic tanks and toilets, and a whole slew of unimaginable filth. Like a sewer, he receives everything that comes his way, never bothering to test to see whether those things he hears and sees are true and therefore worthy of keeping in his heart. He never bothers to "filter" those sundry ideas he accepts as all being "pure".
Such a one has convinced himself there are no absolutes and that everything is relative. When someone does make a claim regarding truth, he quickly dismisses the claimant as being "intolerant", "bigoted", and "narrow minded". What he fails to realize is that he himself is a hypocrite. On one hand he says that all is relative and to each his own, and on the other, he excludes as intolerant, anyone who disagrees with his view! He says in so many words, that if you do not think as I do, you are wrong, and yet says that it is wrong to be exclusivistic! The duplicity here staggers the mind, and what is even more incredible is the amount of intelligent men and women who actually hold this position, all the while remaining ignorant to its obviously contradictory and hypocritical nature.
The so called "New Age Spirituality" movement championed by such well known figures as Oprah Winfrey and Deepak Chopra is replete with just such inconsistencies. It is a wonder indeed that their illogical teachings and contradictory views are so widely accepted as "truth" as they are.
It seems that the great need in our institutions of learning today is not that our children be taught that they are little more than advanced apes due to a time plus matter plus chance blind process of natural selection, but rather very simply, how to think logically and soundly!
It has been said that one of the chief aims of philosophy is to answer the question: "What is truth?" How can we endeavor to even set out on this journey with any confidence of reaching our destination if all we are taught is that "truth" really does not exist!
Relativism is simply not tenable nor livable. It is not practical and certainly not true. Its appeal must be in its "whatever feels good, then do it" mantra. Lust has a remarkable way of convincing us that pleasure supersedes truth in value.
If we desire true illumination we would do well to remember the Lord's exhortation to above all else, watch over our heart with all diligence, For from it flow the springs of life. Proverbs 4:23.