revsdd
Well-Known Member
Or you could believe that the texts are true, just not literally, completely, or exclusively so. Then you can engage with scripture as I and many UUs do; as a source, rather than THE source of spiritual wisdom. They are part of a vast library rather than being the whole library. The wrestling doesn't go away, but you are wrestling with which vision of the truth makes sense in light of your overall experience rather than how to reconcile your experience with a specific text that you are told is the sole truth. IOW, your experience matters and it is your engagement with the text and how it relates to what you've seen, heard, read, experienced elsewhere that determines how it informs your beliefs and values. Yes, it means there is no absolute, final answer to some of the "big questions" but it isn't purely relational either. The gathering of views and values, the recognition that the spiritual is about relationship and that some ideas contribute more positively to relationship than others, means that some ideas will be widely accepted as true. Things like "do not murder" or "love one another" may not be written on the soul of the universe or handed down from above, but they clearly speak strongly to human hearts.
You can also try to understand the difference between "truth" (which is at least partially a philosophical concept) and "fact" (which is absolutely verifiable.) There are many, many "truths" which can't be proven. Pretty much everybody would agree that it's true that what happened at the Quebec City mosque was evil. Prove it. Empirically.
I would also say that many Christians - while seeing the Bible as foundational to our faith - are not closed to there being spiritual wisdom in other traditions.