Advertisement

A Few Thoughts on Truth

Share via
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Some observations about religious Truth, truth and truths at the fourth annual conference on seminary education at the Holy Spirit Retreat Center:

On the Catholic tradition of supernatural truths often described as divine mysteries:

“I’ve become humbled over the years to realize how little of truth I know. One thing I find helpful is not to say what mystery is but to protect it.”

--Patrick Mitchell, St. John’s Seminary

*

On grasping Truth and developing priorities among truth commitments:

“One, Truth is larger than any one group’s understanding, and two, some commitments are more binding than others. You can’t possibly be orthodox on every point of your faith.”

Advertisement

--David Scholer, Fuller Theological Seminary

*

On finding truth in the Bible:

“The Decalogue (Ten Commandments) doesn’t address me [as a woman]--I’m part of the livestock. I have to look at where the Decalogue points. . . . It’s not that Scripture is inerrant but is inexhaustible.”

--Rachel Adler, Hebrew Union College.

*

On embracing various religious identities simultaneously:

“Some people, particularly educated people, see no reason today to choose one or another religion. For example, I know a graduate student who was born and raised Catholic, attends a Unitarian Church, practices yoga daily and observes the change of seasons in Wicca [neo-pagan] fashion.”

--Donald Miller, USC School of Religion

*

On Truth (God) as the seeker:

“I have to say that God is Truth and addresses us. That we have a truth or the truth is less important than [that] it has sought us.”

Advertisement

--Paul Ford, St. John’s Seminary

*

On truth’s importance to Jewish converts in contrast to Judaism’s emphasis on righteous acts:

“Converts typically emphasize beliefs more than practice, which may in part be driving the [new] interest in spirituality in Judaism.”

--Rabbi Susan Laemmle, USC

Advertisement