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The Big Questions (3): The Need for Revelation

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  • The Big Questions (3): The Need for Revelation

    In the previous two parts of this series, we answered the two
    "big
    questions."

    Who made us? God. Why are we here? To serve and worship
    Him. A third question naturally arose:

    "If our Creator made us to serve
    and worship Him, how do we do that?"

    In the previous article I suggested
    that the only way we can serve our Creator is through obeying His mandates,
    as conveyed through revelation.
    But many people would question my assertion: Why does mankind
    need revelation? Isn't it enough just to be good? Isn't it enough for each
    of us to worship God in our own way?
    Regarding the need for revelation, I would make the following points:
    In the first article of this series I pointed out that life is full of injustices,
    but our Creator is fair and just and He establishes justice not in this life,
    but in the afterlife. However, justice cannot be established without four
    things—a court (i.e., the Day of Judgment); a judge (i.e., the Creator);
    witnesses (i.e., men and women, angels, elements of creation); and

    a
    book of laws upon which to judge

    (i.e., revelation). Now, how can our
    Creator establish justice if He did not hold humankind to certain laws
    during their lives? It's not possible. In that scenario, instead of justice,
    God would be dealing out

    injustice, for He would be punishing people for
    transgressions they had no way of knowing were crimes.
    Why else do we need revelation? To begin with, without guidance
    mankind cannot even agree on social and economic issues, politics, laws,
    etc. So how can we ever agree on God? Secondly, nobody writes the user
    manual better than the one who made the product. God is the Creator,
    we are creation, and nobody knows the overall scheme of creation better
    than the Creator. Are employees allowed to design their own job descriptions,
    duties and compensation packages as they see fit? Are all citizens
    allowed to write their own laws? No? Well then, why should we be allowed
    to write our own religions? If history has taught us anything, it is
    the tragedies that result when mankind follows its caprice. How many
    who have claimed to banner of free thought have designed religions that
    committed themselves and their followers to nightmares on Earth and
    damnation in the hereafter?
    Islamhouse.com
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    So why isn't it enough just to be good? And why isn't it enough for
    each of us to worship God in our own way? To begin with, peoples' definitions
    of


    "good" differ. For some it is high morals and clean living, for others
    it is madness and mayhem. Similarly, concepts of how to serve and
    worship our Creator differ as well. More importantly and to the point,
    nobody can walk into a store or a restaurant and pay with a different
    currency than the merchant accepts. So it is with religion. If people want
    God to accept their servitude and worship, they have to pay in the currency
    God demands. And that currency is obedience to His revelation.
    Imagine raising children in a home in which you have set

    "house
    rules."

    Then, one day, one of your children tells you he or she has
    changed the rules, and is going to do things differently. How would you
    respond? More than likely, with the words,

    "You can take your new rules
    and go to Hell!"

    Well, think about it. We are God's creation, living in His
    universe under His rules, and

    "go to Hell" is very likely what God will say
    to any who presume to override His laws with their own.
    Sincerity becomes an issue at this point. We should recognize that all
    pleasure is a gift from our Creator, and deserving of thanks. If given a gift,
    who uses the gift before giving thanks? And yet, many of us enjoy God's
    gifts for a lifetime and

    never give thanks. Or give it late. The English poet,
    Elizabeth Barrett Browning, spoke of the irony of the distressed human
    appeal in

    The Cry of the Human”:
    And lips say

    “God be pitiful,”
    Who ne’er said,


    “God be praised.”
    Should we not show good manners and thank our Creator for His
    gifts


    now, and subsequently for the rest of our lives? Don't we owe that
    to Him?
    You answered

    "Yes." You must have. Nobody will have read this far
    without being in agreement, but here's the problem: Many of you answered
    Yes


    , knowing full well that your heart is not in the Bible. Or perIslamhouse.
    com
    5
    haps it is in the Bible, but not entirely. You agree we were created by a
    Creator. You struggle to understand Him. And you yearn to serve and
    worship Him in the manner He prescribes. But you don't know how, and
    you don't know where to look for the answers. And that, unfortunately, is
    not a subject that can be answered in an article. Unfortunately, that issue
    has to be addressed in a book.
    On the other hand, the good news is that I have written this book,
    and its title is “


    The First and Final Commandment” (soon to be republished
    under the title, “

    MisGod'ed”). So if you like what you've read here,
    I invite you to read what I’ve written there.
    Copyright © 2007 Laurence B. Brown.
    The author can be contacted at

    MODERATOR NOTE: IT IS NOT ALLOWED TO POST EMAILS]. He is the author]
    of

    The First and Final Commandment” (Amana Publications) and Bearing
    True Witness”

    (Dar-us-Salam). Forthcoming books are a historical
    thriller, “

    The Eighth Scroll”, and a second edition of The First and Final
    Commandment”

    , rewritten and divided into MisGod'ed” and its sequel,
    God'ed.”

    التعديل الأخير تم بواسطة loving Islam; الساعة 15-09-2010, 01:40 AM.
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