Dictionary Definition
revelatory adj
1 (usually followed by `of') pointing out or
revealing clearly; "actions indicative of fear" [syn: indicative, indicatory, significative, suggestive]
2 prophetic of devastation or ultimate doom [syn:
apocalyptic,
apocalyptical]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Of, pertaining to, or in the nature of a revelation
- Prophetic (especially of doom); apocalyptic
Extensive Definition
Revelation is the act of revealing or disclosing
(see etymology), or in the theological conception, making something
obvious and clearly understood through active or passive
communication with the divine, "which could not be
known apart from the unveiling" (Goswiller 1987 p. 3).
In monotheistic
religions, revelation
is the process, or act of making divine knowledge understood, often
through direct ontological realization which
transcends the human state and reaches into the divine
intellect.
Revelation in a religious sense can originate
from God, a
deity, or their agents such as an angel, and discloses a willed
outcome, principles, behaviors, laws and doctrines, although the
realized principle can also be interpreted as the realizing
principle.
Most religions have religious
texts viewed as sacred and revealed by the
Divine, the monotheistic religions viewing them as the "Word of
God".
Scriptural hermeneutics
Throughout religious history, some scholars and students of religious texts have sought to mine the wealth of their meanings, by developing a variety of different systems of hermeneutics. Philosophical hermeneutics, in particular, can be seen as a development of scriptural hermeneutics, providing a theoretical backing for various interpretive projects. Thus, philosophical hermeneutics and scriptural hermeneutics can be seen as mutually reinforcing concepts.Rabbi
Ishmael of the Amoraic era of Judaism interpreted
laws from the Torah through 13
hermeneutic principles. This is the first appearance of
hermeneutics in the World, through the exegetic interpretation of
Biblical texts.
Biblical hermeneutics refers to methods of
interpreting the Bible. Biblical hermeneutics is part of the
broader hermeneutical question, relates to the problem of how one
is to understand Holy Scripture. By definition, this is a theological act, ie. part of
the discourse of a faith-community. This does not mean that it is
of no relevance to those who do not consider themselves to be part
of that community, but rather that it is an issue that arises out
of the particular needs of that community.
Therefore, one ought to differentiate between
Christian and
Jewish Biblical hermeneutics: although there is an overlap between
the two (and some form of dialogs), since they share part of their
scriptures, they do arise out of different faith traditions and
thus developed their own notion of hermeneutics.
It must also be stressed that theological
differences within these faith communities preclude any
'definitive' statement on Biblical hermeneutics.
Pesher is a Hebrew
word meaning "interpretation" in the sense of a "solution". It
became known from one group of texts, numbering some hundreds,
among the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The pesharim (plural of Pesher) take a book of the
Hebrew
Bible, often from the prophets, such as Habakkuk,
Nahum, or
from the Psalms,
quote it phrase by phrase, and after each quotation insert an
interpretation, preceded by "its Pesher is".
A tafsir ( (Arabic:
تفسير) tafsīr, also transliterated tafseer,
Arabic
"interpretation"), sharing the same etymology with Hebrew "pesher"
is Qur'anic
exegesis or commentary.
Someone who writes tafsir is a mufassir ( (Arabic:
مفسر) mufassir, plural (Arabic:
مفسرون) mufassirūn).
Divine revelation in Judaism
The origin of the Torah and prophecy
The Torah and Oral Law
Rabbinic Judaism, and contemporary Orthodox Judaism, hold that the Torah (Pentateuch) extant today is essentially the same one that the whole of the Jewish people received on Mount Sinai, from God, upon their Exodus from Egypt. Beliefs that God gave a "Torah of truth" to Moses (and the rest of the people), that Moses was the greatest of the prophets, and that the Law given to Moses will never be changed, are three of the Thirteen Principles of Faith of Orthodox Judaism according to Maimonides. Maimonides explains: "We do not know exactly how the Torah was transmitted to Moses. But when it was transmitted, Moses merely wrote it down like a secretary taking dictation....(Thus) every verse in the Torah is equally holy, as they all originate from God, and are all part of God's Torah, which is perfect, holy and true."Orthodox Judaism believes that in addition to the
written Torah, God also revealed to Moses a set of oral teachings,
called the Oral Torah. In
addition to this revealed law, Jewish law contains
decrees and enactments made by prophets, rabbis, and sages over the
course of Jewish history. Haredi
Judaism tends to regard even rabbinic decrees as being of
divine origin or divinely inspired, while Modern
Orthodox Judaism tends to regard them as being more potentially
subject to human error, although due to the Biblical verse "Do not
stray from their words" ("Deuteronomy 17:11) it is still accepted
as binding law.
Not only did God reveal himself to Moses and the
entire Israelite nation he brought out from Egypt (numbering
approximately 3 million), but it is asserted, in no uncertain
terms, that God did not reveal himself in any manner as claimed by
Christianity, Islam or any other religion. Judaism puts forth an
argument that can be seen in the following parable:
- ''A king with twin princes dies without ever having revealed who it was that would take his place, and the king's counselors and ministers do not know who to choose. Both princes are campaigning for the position, pointing out the flaws of the other and doing their best to secure the throne. One day, one of the princes calls a meeting of his late father's court and tells tells them the following: "I have very solemn news. Last night, my father came to me in a dream and told me that I am supposed to become king." The chief minister responds: "Dear prince, I am sure I speak for everyone when I say that it is wonderful that you had the opportunity to connect with your father's spirit and I hope it was a moving experience for you. However, I must say that we cannot honor your father's wishes as you have expressed them -- for if he really wanted you to become king, he should have come in a dream to all of us, not to you."
Judaism's claim to divine revelation is distinct
from that of Christianity and Islam. In particular, Judaism's claim
to divine revelation on a national level removes the faith, hope
and belief that exists so openly in other religions, replacing it
instead with conviction from experience.
Conservative
Judaism tends to regard both the Torah and the Oral law as not
directly revealed. The Conservative approach tends to regard the
Torah as compiled by redactors in a manner similar to the Documentary
Hypothesis. However, Conservative Jews tend to regard the
authors of the Torah as divinely inspired and many regard at least
portions of it as originating with Moses. Positions can vary from
the position of Joel Roth,
following David
Weiss HaLivni, that while the Torah originally given to Moses
on Mount Sinai became corrupted or lost and had to be recompiled
later by redactors, the recompiled Torah is nonetheless regarded as
fully Divine and legally authoritative, to the position of Gordon
Tucker that the Torah, while Divinely inspired, is a largely
human document containing significant elements of human error, and
should be regarded as the beginning of an ongoing process which is
continuing today. Conservative Judaism also tends to regard the
Oral Law as a whole as divinely inspired but subject to human
error.
Reform and Reconstructionist Jews also tend to
accept the Documentary Hypothesis for the origin of the Torah, and
tend to view all of the Oral law as an entirely human creation.
Accordingly, Progressive
Judaism, Reform and
Reconstructionist
Judaism, believe that the Torah is not entirely a direct
revelation from God, but is a document written by human ancestors,
carrying human understanding and experience, and seeking to answer
the question: 'What does God require of us?'. They believe that,
though it contains many 'core-truths' about God and humanity, it is
also time bound, sexist, primitive, and, sometimes, simply wrong.
They believe that God's will is revealed through the interaction of
humanity and God throughout history, and so, in that sense, Torah
is an important part, but only a part, of an ongoing
revelation.
The Prophets
The Nevi'im, the books
of the Prophets, are considered divine and true. This does not
imply that the books of the prophets are always read literally.
Jewish tradition has always held that prophets used metaphors and
analogies. There exists a wide range of commentaries explaining and
elucidating those verses consisting of metaphor.
Rabbinic
Judaism regards Moses as the greatest of the prophets, and this
view is one of the
Thirteen Principles of Faith of traditional Judaism. Consistent
with the view that revelation to Moses was generally clearer than
revelation to other prophets, Orthodox views of revelation to
prophets other than Moses have included a range of perspectives as
to directness. For example, Maimonides in
The Guide for the Perplexed said that accounts of revelation in
the Nevi'im
were not always as literal as in the Torah and that some
prophetic accounts reflect allegories rather than literal commands
or predictions.
Conservative
Rabbi and
philosopher
Abraham
Joshua Heschel (1907-1972), author of a number of works on
prophecy, offered a view of the nature of revelation as a process
rather than an event. In his work God in Search of Man, he
discussed the experience of being a prophet. In his book Prophetic
Inspiration After the Prophets: Maimonides and Others, Heschel
references to continued prophetic inspiration in Jewish Rabbinic
Literature following the destruction of the Temple
in Jerusalem and into medieval and even Modern times. He wrote
that
- To convey what the prophets experienced, the Bible could either use terms of descriptions or terms of indication. Any description of the act of revelation in empirical categories would have produced a caricature. That is why all the Bible does is to state that revelation happened. How it happened is something they could only convey in words that are evocative and suggestive."
Divine revelation in Christianity
Scriptural canon of Christianity
Christianity
regards the Bible, a collection
of canonical
books in two parts, the Old
Testament and the New
Testament, as authoritative: written by human authors under the
inspiration
of the Holy Spirit.
Some Christians believe that the Bible is inerrant. Protestants
believe that the scriptures contain all revealed truth necessary
for salvation (See
Sola
scriptura).
The Old
Testament contains the entire Jewish Tanakh, though in
the Christian canon the books are ordered differently and some
books of the Tanakh are divided into several books by the Christian
canon. The Catholic and
Orthodox
canons include the Hebrew Jewish canon and other books (from the
Septuagint Greek Jewish canon) which Catholics call Deuterocanonical,
while Protestants consider them Apocrypha.
The first four books of the New Testament are the
Gospels
(Matthew,
Mark,
Luke and
John),
which recount the life and teachings of Jesus. The first
three are often called synoptic
because of the amount of material they share. The rest of the New
Testament consists of a sequel to Luke's Gospel, the Acts
of the Apostles, which describes the very early history of the
Church, a collection of letters from early Christian leaders to
congregations or individuals, the Pauline
and General
epistles, and the apocalyptic
Book of
Revelation. which considers that the three persons of God
(Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) share a single Divine substance. This
substance is not considered divided, in the sense that each person
has a third of the substance; rather, each person is considered to
have the whole substance. The distinction lies in their relations,
the Father being unbegotten, the Son begotten of the Father, and
the Holy Spirit proceeding. The "begetting" does not refer to
Mary's conceiving Jesus, but to a divine begetting before
Creation.
Christians were
willing to die for their faith because of 3 key ideas that can be
noted from their own writings. One: their belief that Jesus was resurrected, two: religious
experience, and three: fuller understanding of Old
Testament Scriptures.
Central to the doctrines of the Catholic
and Eastern
Orthodox Churches is Apostolic
Succession, the belief that the bishops are the spiritual
successors of the original twelve apostles, through the
historically unbroken chain of consecration (see: Holy Orders).
The New
Testament contains warnings against teachings considered to be
only masquerading as Christianity, and shows how reference was made
to the leaders of the Church to decide what was true doctrine. The
Catholic Church teaches that it is the continuation of those who
remained faithful to the apostolic and episcopal leadership and
rejected false teachings.
Whereas Catholics and
Eastern
Orthodox look to synods, and the Catholics also to
the Pope, for
authority, Protestants, a
wide branch of Christian believers look to the Bible for authority.
The Protestants characterize the dogma concerning the Pope as
Christ's representative head of the Church on earth, the concept of
meritorious works, and the Catholic idea of a treasury of the
merits of saints, as a denial that Christ is the only mediator
between God and
man: Solus
Christus (Christ alone).
Protestants believe that the teachings of the
Roman
Catholic Church obscure the teachings of the Bible by
convoluting it with church history and doctrine: Sola
Scriptura (Scripture
alone).
Christians believe the Holy Spirit
inspired
the Scriptures, and that his active participation in a believer's
life (even to the extent of "indwelling", or in a certain sense
taking up residence within, the believer) is essential to living a
Christian life. In Catholic, Orthodox, and some
Anglican
theology, this indwelling in received through the sacrament called
Confirmation
or, in the East, Chrismation.
Most Protestants believe that the Spirit indwells a new believer at
the time of salvation.
Pentecostal
and charismatic
Protestants believe the
Baptism with the Holy Spirit is a distinct experience separate
from other experiences like conversion.
Pentecostalism
is an American offshoot of Methodism. The
doctrine of charismatic gifts is a well-known feature of
Pentecostalism. Charismatic gifts are extra-normal abilities that
are transmitted from the divine to individuals. These gifts include
glossolalia
(speaking in tongues), healing ability, and prophesy. Such gifts are
bestowed upon Pentecostals at baptism, and are a fixture of
Pentecostal church services. The ecstatic receipt of charismatic
gifts can be accompanied by a loss of motor control, giving
Pentecostals the nickname "Holy
Rollers."
The charismatic
movement adopted the Pentecostal doctrines of charismatic
gifts: speaking in tongues, prophesying, etc. Many
charismatic Christians have gone on to form separate churches and
denominations.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sets itself
apart from most other faiths claiming salvation through Jesus
Christ in regards to revelation. This church, also known as the
Mormons,
believes that their founder, Joseph
Smith Jr., was called directly by God the Father and his son
Jesus Christ to restore the church that Christ established on the
earth during his life and ministry. The church has claimed constant
revelation by the leaders and members of the church ever since that
occasion. The Latter-day Saints take as their doctrine that
revelation continues to flow from heaven to the church's leaders,
and that the president of the church receives revelation directly
from God for the direction of the Church. Each member of the
Latter-day Saints is also confirmed a member of the church
following baptism and given the "gift of the Holy Ghost" by which
each member is encouraged to develop a personal relationship with
that divine being and receive personal revelation for their own
direction and that of their family.
Current controversies and criticisms
There are many controversies surrounding
Christianity as to its influences and history.
- A few writers propose that Jesus is a myth, though historians generally agree that Jesus existed and have aimed at reconstructing the historical Jesus.
- Some writers consider Paul to be the founding figure of Christianity as opposed to Jesus, pointing to the extent of his writings and the scope of his missionary work. See also Pauline Christianity.
- Members of the Jesus Seminar, and other Biblical scholars, have argued that the historical Jesus never claimed to be divine. They also reject the historicity of the empty tomb and thus a bodily resurrection, and several other events narrated in the gospels. They assert that Gospel accounts describing these things are probably literary fabrications. However a more scholarly and respected movement known as the Modern Quest for the Historical Jesus has been the forefront of attempting salvage the image of the historical Jesus in our modern society.
- Adherents of Judaism generally believe that followers of Christianity misinterpret passages from the Old Testament, or Tanakh. (See also Christianity and Judaism.)
- Muslims believe that the Christian doctrine of the Trinity is incompatible with monotheism, and they reject the Christian teaching that Jesus is the Son of God, though they affirm the virgin birth (as the son of Mary alone) and view him as a prophet preceding Muhammad. The Qur'an also uses the title "Messiah", though with a different meaning. Muslims also dispute the historical occurrence of the crucifixion of Jesus.
Scriptural canon of the Messianic 'Judaism'
Messianic believers (who some Jews do not
consider to be Jewish since they accept Jesus as the Messiah, who
in dominant Jewish understanding has not yet arrived) commonly hold
the Tanakh
to be divinely inspired. The Tanakh includes the Torah (first five
books of Moses), Nevi'im (the Prophets) and Ketuvim (the Writings).
The Apostolic
Writings (or New
Testament) are often considered to also be divinely inspired.
Many hold them to be equal in authority to the Tanakh, but this is
not universal and can vary from individual to individual even
within the same synagogue or Torah study. Some Messianic believers
are most often troubled by the writings of Paul (whom they often
call Rabbi Sha'ul) and may reject his writings, hold them in less
esteem than those of the Gospel writers, or even reject him. Often,
the emphasis is on the idea that the Tanakh is the only scripture
the Early Church had and that, except for the recorded words of
Jesus, the Apostolic Writings were meant as inspired commentary on
the Tanakh.
Canon:
- Torah [תורה] meaning one or all of: "The Law"; "Teaching"; "Instruction". Also called the Chumash [חומש] meaning: "The five"; "The five books of Moses". It is the "Pentateuch".
- Nevi'im [נביאים] meaning: "Prophets"
- Ketuvim [כתובים] meaning "Writings" or "Hagiographa".
- Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
- Acts
- General epistles of James, Peter, Paul and of the author of Hebrews
- Revelation
Divine revelation in Islam
Divine revelation plays a very important role in the Muslim faith. While religious books of most faiths acknowledge their human author's contribution to the divine text, the Qur'an claims to have been revealed word by word and letter by letter. The Qur'an is therefore, no doubt, a milestone in the development of revelation literature, and its authenticity is not seriously questioned. Islam knows different forms and degrees of divine revelation. See for example.Muslims believe
that God revealed his final message to humanity through Muhammad
ibn Abdullah (c. 570 - July 6, 632) via the angel Gabriel. Muhammad
is considered to have been God's final prophet, the "Seal
of the Prophets". The revelations Muhammad preached form the
holy book of Islam, the Qur'an. The Qur'an is believed to be the
flawless final revelation of God to humanity, valid until the day of the
Resurrection.
Muslims hold that the message of Islam -
submission to the will of the one God - is the same as the message
preached by all the messengers sent by God to humanity since
Adam. From
an Islamic point of view, Islam is the oldest of the monotheistic
religions because it represents both the original and the final
revelation of God to Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad. Members
of all sects of Islam believe that the Qur'an codifies the direct
words of God.
According to Islamic traditions, Muhammad began
receiving revelations from God
(Arabic: ألله Allah) from the age
of 40, delivered through the angel Gabriel over the last 23 years
of his life. The content of these revelations, known as the Qur'an,
was memorized and recorded by his followers and compiled into a
single volume shortly after his death. The Qur'an, along with the
details of Muhammad’s life as
recounted by his biographers and his contemporaries,
forms the basis of Islamic theology. Within Islam, he is
considered the last and most important prophet
of God. Muslims do not regard him as the founder of a new religion
but as the restorer of the original monotheistic faith of Adam,
Abraham and other prophets whose messages had become misinterpreted
or corrupted
over time (only misinterpreted according to some).
Similarities between the Qur'ān and the Bible
The Qur'ān retells stories of many of the people and events recounted in Jewish and Christian sacred books (Tanakh, Bible) and devotional literature (Apocrypha, Midrash), although it differs in many details. Adam, Enoch, Noah, Heber, Shelah, Abraham, Lot, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Job, Jethro, David, Solomon, Elijah, Elisha, Jonah, Aaron, Moses, Zechariah, Jesus, and John the Baptist are mentioned in the Qur'an as prophets of God (see Prophets of Islam). Muslims believe the common elements or resemblances between the Bible and other Jewish and Christian writings and Islamic dispensations is due to the common divine source, and that the Christian or Jewish texts were authentic divine revelations given to prophets. According to the Qur'ān "It is He Who sent down to thee (step by step), in truth, the Book, confirming what went before it; and He sent down the Law (of Moses) and the Gospel (of Jesus) before this, as a guide to mankind, and He sent down the criterion (of judgment between right and wrong).3:3 " Muslims claim that those texts were neglected or corrupted (tahrif) by the Jews and Christians and have been replaced by God's final and perfect revelation, which is the Qur'ān. Many Jews and Christians believe that the biblical archaeological record refutes this assertion, because the Dead Sea Scrolls (the Tanakh and other Jewish writings which predate the origin of the Qur'an) have been fully translated, validating the authenticity of the Greek Septuagint.Divine revelation in the Bahá'í Faith
Following the progression and spread of literacy in human history, the Central Figures of the Bahá'í Faith were in a position in the 1800s to receive thousands of written enquiries, and to thus write thousands of responses, hundreds of which amount to whole and proper books, while many are the shorter texts, as letters. Additionally survey publications have attempted to broadly review important themes across many dozens of individual texts (see listings in articles below). In addition to the practicality of literacy however, the Bahá'í faith has large works which were divinely revealed in a very short time, as in a night, or a few days. Additionally, because many of the works were first recorded by an amanuensis, most were submitted for approval and had corrections added - another milestone in that the final text was personally approved by the revelator.Bahá'u'lláh would occasionally write the words of
revelation down himself, but normally the revelation was dictated
to his amanuensis, who sometimes recorded it in what has been
called 'revelation writing', a shorthand script written with
extreme speed owing to the rapidity of the utterance of the words.
Afterwards, Bahá'u'lláh revised and approved these drafts. These
'revelation drafts' and many other transcriptions of the writings
of Bahá'u'lláh's, circa 17,000 items, some of which are in his own
handwriting, are kept in the
International Bahá'í Archives in Haifa, Israel.
For extended comments on the divine revelation of
the Báb,
Bahá'u'lláh,
and `Abdu'l-Bahá
see Number of
tablets revealed by Bahá'u'lláh by Robert Stockman and Juan
Cole and Numbers
and Classifications of Sacred Writings texts by
Universal House of Justice. Second-hand notes of the words of
the Central Figures of the Bahá'í faith are termed pilgrim notes
and have little status. See also Horace Holley's preface of
The Bahá'í Revelation, including Selections from the Bahá'í Holy
Writings and Talks by `Abdu'l-Bahá.
Latter Day Saint concept of revelation
The Latter Day Saint concept of revelation includes the belief that revelation from God is available to all those who earnestly seek it with the intent of doing good. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and some other Latter Day Saint denominations claim to be led by revelation from God to a living prophet, who receives God’s word just as Abraham, Moses, Peter, and other ancient prophets and apostles did. It also teaches that everyone is entitled to personal revelation with respect to his or her stewardship. Thus, parents may receive inspiration from God in raising their families, individuals can receive divine inspiration to help them meet personal challenges, church officers may receive revelation for those whom they serve, and so forth. The important consequence of this is that each person may receive confirmation that particular doctrines taught by a prophet are true, as well as gain divine insight in using those truths for their own benefit and eternal progress. In the church, personal revelation is expected and encouraged, and many converts believe that personal revelation from God was instrumental in their conversion. Joseph F. Smith, the sixth president of the LDS Church, summarized this church's belief concerning revelation by saying, "We believe... in the principle of direct revelation from God to man." (Smith, 362)Latter-day
Saints believe in an open scriptural canon, and in addition to
the Bible and
the Book of
Mormon, have books of scripture containing the revelations of
modern-day prophets such as the Doctrine
and Covenants and the
Pearl of Great Price.
Church leaders (from the
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles) have taught during the Church's
General Conferences that conference talks which are "...[spoken
as] moved upon by the Holy Ghost shall be scripture...". In
addition, many Mormons believe that ancient prophets in other
regions of the world received revelations that resulted in
additional scriptures that have been lost and may, one day, be
forthcoming. Hence, the belief in continuing revelation (i.e., an
open canon).
Joseph Smith, Jr.
Joseph Smith, Jr. (December 23, 1805 – June 27, 1844) was an American religious leader who founded the Latter Day Saint movement,a restorationist movement
giving rise to Mormonism.
Smith's followers declared him to be the first latter-day
prophet, whose mission
was to restore the original Christianity,
said to have been lost after a Great
Apostasy. This restoration included publication of the Book of
Mormon and other new scripture to supplement the Bible, and the
establishment of the
Church of Christ. As leader of this religion, he was also an
important political and military leader in the American
West.
During his adult life—from the time he began
translating the Book of Mormon in 1827 until his death in
1844—Smith introduced a large number of religious teachings.
Although a number of his teachings are similar to doctrines
circulating during his lifetime, several are unique to Latter Day
Saint denominations.
Nearly all Smith's teachings had some root in the
King
James Version of the Bible, or his interpretation or
elaboration of it. However, he believed in other scripture, and
that in some instances, the Bible was translated incorrectly or
incompletely. Thus, he "restored" temples,
orders of priesthood,
and other elements of the Bible that he believed had been wrongly
abandoned by mainstream Christianity as part of a Great
Apostasy.
In many cases, Smith's doctrines or
interpretations of the Bible, as well as his own claimed
revelations, placed him at odds with mainstream Christianity. For
example, Smith rejected mainstream Christianity's long-standing
formulation of the Trinity as recorded
in the 4th century
Nicene
Creed.
Joseph Smith taught that Heavenly
Father, Jesus
Christ, and the Holy Ghost are
three separate personages, with Heavenly Father and Jesus having
physical bodies of "flesh and bone," while the Holy Ghost has only
a spiritual body. He also taught that God is the Heavenly Father of
all mankind and that mankind is made in His express image.
Smith's claim to be a prophet of God has led to
much controversy. Smith was a polarizing figure in his time, and he
continues to be a focus of controversy between his millions of
followers—most of whom revere him as a prophet with the same
authority as prophets of the standard Christian canon—and opponents
of Mormonism, who
think him to have been either delusional or fraudulent.
Divine revelation in the Jehovah's Witnesses concept
The publishing arm of Jehovah's Witnesses, known as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania engages in extensive publication work. In addition to their two magazines -'The Watchtower' and 'Awake!'- they also publish many brochures, tracts and books including the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures.New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures is a
translation of the Protestant
canon. This Bible is distinct in its extensive use of the name
Jehovah, an English version of the Hebrew Tetragrammaton,
also replacing the Greek word for "Lord" over 200 times in the
New
Testament. The translators have opted to remain anonymous but
others have identified them as being prominent leaders of the
movement.
Frederick
William Franz became the leading theologian, and is believed to
have been the principal translator of the New World Translation of
the Holy Scriptures. Also produced were a Greek-English New
Testament interlinear (The Kingdom Interlinear Translation of the
Greek Scriptures) and a Bible dictionary (Aid
to Bible Understanding).
Existentialism
In the 20th century, religious existentialists proposed that revelation held no content in of itself; rather, they hold that God inspired people with His presence by coming into contact with them. In this view the Bible is a human response that records how we responded to God.Revelation or information from a supernatural
source is of much lesser importance in some other religious
traditions. It is not of great importance in the Asian religions
Taoism, and
Confucianism
but similarities have been noted between the Abrahamic view of
revelation and the Buddhist principle
of Enlightenment.
Paul
Johannes Tillich (1886–1965) was a theologian and Christian
existentialist philosopher. Tillich was, along with contemporary
Karl Barth, one of the more influential Protestant theologians of
the twentieth century.
Tillich's approach to Protestant
theology was highly systematic. He sought to correlate culture and
faith such that "faith need not be unacceptable to contemporary
culture and contemporary culture need not be unacceptable to
faith". Consequently, Tillich's orientation is apologetic, seeking to make
concrete theological answers that are applicable to ordinary daily
life. This contributed to his popularity because it made him easily
accessible to lay readers. In a broader perspective, revelation is
understood as the fountainhead of religion. Tillich sought to
reconcile revelation and reason by arguing that revelation never
runs counter to reason (affirming Thomas
Aquinas who said that faith is eminently rational), but both
poles of the subjective human experience are complementary.
Tillich's radical departure from traditional
Christian theology is his view of Christ. According to
Tillich, Christ is the "New Being", who rectifies in himself the
alienation between essence and existence. Essence fully shows
itself within Christ, but Christ is also a finite man. This
indicates, for Tillich, a revolution in the very nature of being.
The gap is healed and essence can now be found within existence.
Thus for Tillich, Christ is not God per se in himself, but Christ
is the revelation of God. Whereas traditional Christianity regards
Christ as wholly man and wholly God, Tillich believed that Christ
was the emblem of the highest goal of man, what God wants men to
become. Thus to be a Christian is to make oneself progressively
"Christ-like", a very possible goal in Tillich's eyes. In other
words, Christ is not God in the traditional sense, but reveals the
essence inherent in all existence, including mine and your own.
Thus Christ is not different from you or me except insofar as he
fully reveals God within his own finitude, something you and I can
also do in principle.
"God does not exist. He is being itself beyond
essence and existence. Therefore to argue that God exists is to
deny him."
Visitation
An experience of presence or communication between the recently deceased and their spouse or progeny is called visitation. This experience may be interpreted by some persons as revealing the will of God. Such experiences are deemed normative and not pathological according to the DSM IV (Diagnostic Manual of Mental Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association). It is the story of the end of time when Jesus comes to collect his followers and take them to heavenCaveats and criticism
In the Age of Reason, Thomas Paine maintained that revelation can only be considered valid for the original recipient and when subsequently communicated by the recipient to a second person it ceases to be a revelation but rather becomes a hearsay second hand account, and consequently they are not obliged to believe it.See also
References
- The Newsletter of the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS) at Brigham Young University Insights! volume 25 | 2005, Number 4, p.5
External links
revelatory in Old English (ca. 450-1100):
Apocalipsis
revelatory in Arabic: وحي
revelatory in Danish: Åbenbaring
revelatory in German: Offenbarung
revelatory in Modern Greek (1453-): Θεία
αποκάλυψη
revelatory in Spanish: Revelación divina
revelatory in Esperanto: Revelacio
revelatory in Persian: وحی
revelatory in French: Révélation
revelatory in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Revelation
revelatory in Italian: Rivelazione
revelatory in Malay (macrolanguage): Wahyu
revelatory in Dutch: Openbaring
revelatory in Japanese: 啓示
revelatory in Norwegian: Åpenbaring
revelatory in Polish: Objawienie
revelatory in Portuguese: Revelação divina
revelatory in Romanian: Revelaţie
revelatory in Russian: Откровение
revelatory in Serbian: Откровење
revelatory in Swedish: Uppenbarelse
revelatory in Vietnamese: Mặc khải
revelatory in Chinese: 啟示