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World Religions - Sacred
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CHAPTER 2: Divine Law, Truth, and Cosmic Principle
All religions recognize a transcendent Law, Truth, or Principle
which governs the universe and human affairs. Sometimes this Principle is
identified with Ultimate Reality itself, but it is more often consequent
upon and subordinate to it. We have placed side by side passages on the
Word (Greek: logos) or Wisdom (Hebrew: kochma) of Christianity, Torah of
Judaism, Dharma and order (Rita) of Hinduism; and Tao and Principle (li)
of Chinese Religion. In Buddhism we have passages on several related
concepts: Wisdom (prajna), Absolute Truth (dharmadhatu), and Teaching
(dhamma). In placing passages on these concepts together, their variety
should illuminate the subtle differences between them.
In some religious doctrines, truth or lawfulness is a property
inherent in Ultimate Reality. The laws of the universe are the basis of
the Absolute--e.g., the Tao of Chinese religion which is the creative
principle itself, or the Absolute Truth which is realized by the Buddha.
In other traditions--Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and theistic
Hinduism--God conceives of Law and then sets it up as the standard or
measure for his work of creation. This leads to a question which has
engaged theologians: is God bound by his own laws, or is he free to
contravene them to perform miracles, etc.? Hindu mythology has no trouble
with deities performing all manner of miracles, but in Christianity the
tendency has been to assert the consistency of rational principles, and
even to seek explanations for the miraculous within the normal functioning
of natural law. In Christianity, the Word finds its chief manifestation
in Christ, the Word made flesh, the Truth incarnate. This is echoed in
Confucian and Buddhist scriptures where the Tao or the Dharma is only
completely realized by a perfectly enlightened being. In some traditions,
the law is a property of samsaric existence which must ultimately be
transcended--e.g., the Hindu and Jain law of karma and the Buddhist
doctrine of dependent origination. Similarly in Christianity Paul
critiques the law as a form of slavery, unable to save. These are some of
the diverse colors which one finds in these passages depicting the Truth
or Law or Principle which is at the heart of the cosmos.
Regardless of these differences, all these religious viewpoints
share a respect for the Law which human beings violate at their peril.
The universe is fundamentally moral, an expression of the workings of a
divine Principle or natural law in both the realms of nature and of human
affairs. Hence human morality is not relative, not explicable as the
result of social and cultural conditioning alone. Morality and ethics are
rooted in the way things are (ontology); they are as enduring as the laws
of physics.
This chapter treats the topic of divine Law under six heads. The
first section deals with the origins and foundations of law as the
eternal, pre-existent and all-pervasive ground of existing reality. The
second section discusses divine law as the ground for human ethics and the
basis for the path to liberation. The remaining sections treat four
general expressions of law. First we have lists of divine commandments.
The chief example is the Ten Commandments or Decalogue of Christianity and
Judaism, but there are many parallels in other scriptures, for example the
Buddhist Eightfold Path. Next is the Golden Rule, or the principle of
reciprocity, which is found universally in the scriptures of all
religions. This concise principle is often regarded as a summary statement
of all ethics. Then in the fifth section we move to a more philosophical
plane and treat interdependence and mutuality as a principle at work
throughout nature. We include passages on the polarities of yang and
yin, Shiva and Shakti, Purusha and prakriti, and passages on the
relativity and interchangeability of all phenomena. The final section
treats the law of cause and effect, karma, and the principle of divine
justice through which each person reaps what he or she has sown.
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