First, if it’s really true that Jesus is the way to Father and that
no one comes to the Father except through him, (Jn 14:6) then it seems
that no other religious leader or religious doctrine can bring us to the Father.
“The” is a definite article, and it implies singularity. “A dog” could
refer to one of any number of dogs. But “the dog” can only refer to one
particular dog. If Jesus is the Lord and Savior and the way to
the Father, he’s the only one there is.
This isn’t what most people in our relativistic, post-modern age want to
hear. I, on occasion, give talks or participate in debates on secular university
campuses around the country on issues related to the historical Jesus. Whenever
I stand by the claim that Jesus is the only way to God I am confronted with a
certain amount of hostility. To think there’s only one way to God, I am often
told, is arrogant, ignorant, intolerant and dangerous. Everyone knows these days
that there are many ways to God, at least for people who are sincere in what
they believe.
What’s odd is that no one has ever been able to provide me with cogent
arguments defending this position. When I’ve asked for some, as often as not
people have simply stared at me in disbelief, offended at the suggestion that
truths this obvious would need supporting arguments.
Always beware when any of your beliefs are so “obviously true” you think they
don’t need supporting evidence or arguments. This the way brainwashed
people think!
Another thing that’s odd about the prevailing relativistic attitude today is
that it’s not clear why believing many roads lead to God is any more open minded
than believing only one does. The prevailing attitude seems to confuse the
content of what someone believes with the way they believe
it.
Think about it. A belief is true if it reflects the way reality is, false if
it doesn’t. On all questions of truth, therefore, there is ultimately only
one right answer, for there is ultimately only one reality.
Conversely, there are an infinite number of possible wrong answers. If someone
insists that there isn’t “one reality,” arguing instead that there are as many
different realities as there are people, I would simply respond by pointing out
that they just made a truth claim about ultimate reality (not just
their reality). What’s ultimately real, in their view, is that there
are as many different realities as there are people. And this view is either
true (if it corresponds with the way reality is) or false (if it doesn’t).
As a matter of fact, this claim can’t possibly correspond with reality, for
the claim is actually self-contradictory. It makes a claim about ultimate
reality while denying there is an ultimate reality.
The bottom line is that there is only one way the world is, and the set of
true statements are those – and only those — that reflect this one way. So the
content of what one believes about reality will always necessarily be
narrow. Even the truth claim that all roads lead to God is actually a very
narrow claim. Either this claim reflects reality or it doesn’t. Either it’s true
or it’s false. This has to be decided on the basis of available evidence and
relevant arguments. But the claim itself is no less narrow than the claim that
there’s only one way to God, or three, or seven, etc…. In other words, the claim
that all roads lead to God rules out an infinite number of alternative claims,
just as every other truth claim does.
What makes a person open or closed-minded is not the content of what
they believe, but how they arrive at and hold to the (always narrow and
exclusive) content of what they believe. Do they arrive at and defend their
beliefs with an open or closed mind?
A person who arrived at their beliefs through thoughtful and critical
reflection and who is willing to subject their truth claims to the critical
scrutiny of others is an open-minded person – regardless of the content of what
they believe. On the other hand, a person who simply appropriates and defends a
belief – like, “All roads lead to God” – simply because it’s part of the
cultural atmosphere they breath is a narrow-minded person, despite the apparent
(but illusory) openness of what they believe.
The fact that the “all-roads-lead-to-God” believer may be quick to label
dissenters of the cultural mantra “arrogant, intolerant, ignorant and dangerous”
instead of calmly reasoning with them simply confirms their narrowness.
My belief that Jesus is the only way to God is admittedly narrow, though no
more so than the person who claims there are innumerable ways to God. But I can
give evidence and argumentation to defend my truth claim, and I’m perfectly
willing to adjust my belief if and when the evidence and/or argumentation call
for it. I wish all those who espoused the “all-roads-lead-to-God” mantra shared
this attitude.
- Greg Boyd
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