I
have to make a confession; had I not experienced the living Christ transforming
my life, today I would either be a die-hard atheist or a devout Hindu doing everything
within my power to promote and protect the age old Hindu traditions against the
encroachment from the competing religions and philosophies. However, I am a Christian now, and the
story-line is totally different.
What
made me to accept Jesus as my savior and guide for my life? The one defining factor that made the difference
in my decision to follow Jesus of Nazareth was his resurrection from the
dead. Resurrection of Jesus Christ is
the most fundamental aspect of Christian faith that posits Jesus to be a living
person capable of interacting with human beings individually and
collectively. I happen to be one among millions who could not deny the real presence of living Jesus in their life.
The
thought of an alternative to Christian faith came as I was hiking in Bomunsan,
a mountain with wonderful hiking trails not far from downtown city of Daejeon. Mountains in Korea are venerated as they are dotted
with many Buddhist temples, shrines, monasteries and tombs of ancestors; often
one can easily hear monks chanting, humming or striking the handheld wooden
fish called “moktak” making a peculiar sound identified only with the monks in meditation. For such a culture that finds its identity being
shaped for centuries by these religious sentiments, it is not difficult to
imagine why there is a growing resentment toward Christianity and other
religions.
As I
was trying to be adventurous today; I decided to follow a less traveled trail
as if I was inspired by Robert Frost in taking road not taken. Starting their separate paths from the
bottom, two mountains meet with one another on top making it one peak resulting
in a steep cliff on the northern side; at the bottom of the cliff starts the
ravine with a small brook springing from under the rocks.
As I
was descending, I came at a spot where either I had to follow the mountain’s nose
or try the less traveled trail into the ravine as if I was trying to get to
the left eye of the mountain face; I chose the ravine. Once I was half way down the cliff; I saw
something like a roof of a temple below where the ravine separated the two
mountains. I could also hear a deep
spiritual music coming from the loudspeakers hidden in the rocks and soon the
sound of moktak confirmed that there was a Buddhist temple below. By this time I was in a position from where I
could see the two main temples and a cave completely decorated with candles, idols
and many other religious articles. As I
was enjoying the view from above, a Korean gentleman, in his late twenties or
early thirties, passed me by and went ahead.
When I finally got to the temple, I saw him inside one of the temples kneeling
down before a huge idol of Buddha. One of
the temples appeared to be open to anyone who would like to stop by and pray
while the other was well attended by a few nuns inside. I did not see monks. As the other hiker was inside the temples
praying, I took a few pictures and the ladies from the temple made some gestures
that I was not welcomed to do so but because I was a foreigner, I guessed they
decided to overlook. In Korea,
foreigners are given some sort of license to make mistake and particularly if
you are a person of white descent, you have a larger margin for it.
After
gesturing “anyonghee Kheseyo” (goodbye) to the nuns, I headed down and it was
then that I began to think about my personal journey into the Christian faith
from Hinduism. I pictured the young man
who passed me by, while picturing myself in his place, but was still in the
temple praying; for him, places like these are so real, so personal, and so
inspirational. He does not need the
existence of a God for these things to become relevant to his personhood and
cultural identity. These things are so
ingrained in his cultural milieu and way of life that it is hard for him to
think otherwise. These are the sentiments
that define his way of life and pattern of thinking; his true identity as a
Korean cannot be divorced from the temples, shrines and the sounds in these
mountains regardless of whether there is a God or not. He is the torch bearer of his ancestors’ legacy
and custodian of the wealth of culture, language, literature, and a way of life
they have left for him and for his posterity.
Asking
this young man to accept Christianity is to ask him to commit cultural,
linguistic, literary and religious suicide.
In any religion where God is only limited in legends, in religious texts
or the confinements of temples and geography; rituals and symbols become the
captivating alternative to a personal relationship with the creator of the
heavens and the earth. When there is no
evidence of any living deity interacting with the devotees; no living
relationship with a living person or transcendent being, then the legends, traditions,
cultural norms, religious symbols and sentiments become the only alternative to
form one’s identity be it a Korean, a Chinese, an Indian or anyone. These symbols become so powerful that the
human mind can actually surrender its autonomy to such inanimate things and
objects; rationality and morality become the casualty of such spirituality that
does not have a personal divine being that provides revelation, inspiration,
and moral compass in a broken world. Had
Jesus not risen from the dead, had he not demonstrated his abiding presence in
my life; on the one hand, following human rationality I would have become a
pure naturalist. On the other, failing
to heed to reason, I would have become blind rationally, and would not be
afraid to die or to kill in order to protect my Hindu symbolism; I would have
lost my moral compass by placing spirituality over morality.
Precisely
for this reason, when Jesus presented himself to be the way and the truth and
the life, he coined the greatest commandment consisting of two sides; “Love the
Lord your God with all our heart and with all your soul and with all your strength
and with all your mind; and love your neighbor as yourself” (Luke 10:27). Only in the person of Jesus Christ do we see
the balance between spirituality and morality; loving God cannot be
accomplished without loving one’s neighbor.
Any religion that justifies the killing of one’s neighbor for any reason
has fallen below human morality; the religious symbolism has blinded the voice
of reason within the human soul and thus the depravity reaches lower than the
animal world.
When
a person actually meets the resurrected Jesus, the whole issue of human
identity and cultural heritage takes into a new dimension; a Korean is no
longer just a Korean, a Japanese is no longer just a Japanese, an English is no
longer just an English, an American is no longer just an American, an African
is no longer just an Africa. Humanity
becomes a family regardless of one’s cultural upbringing and religious affiliation;
loving God necessarily leads to loving our neighbors instead of killing
them. That is why a converted Christian
from Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam or any other ways may appear to be committing cultural
and religious suicide; but it is just an appearance. Instead of committing suicide,
such a person truly starts living a spiritual life that values human rationality
and morality. Outside of Jesus Christ,
my spirituality is always in danger of becoming an immoral spirituality and
therefore, it is my moral responsibility to share the gospel with my fellow
hiker in Bomunsan should the opportunity arise.
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