How people view the status of
religions other than their own
Sponsored link.
Overview:
According to David Barrett et al, editors of the "World
Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative survey of churches and religions - AD 30 to 2200," there are 19 major world religions which are subdivided into a
total of 270 large religious groups, and many smaller ones. 34,000 separate Christian groups have been identified worldwide. 1
These religions and faith groups teach very different belief systems. This naturally raises the question of where religious
truth is to be found. To many believers, particularly religious
conservatives, religious truth is of paramount importance. They believe
that one must be saved by embracing the truth before
being eligible to avoid Hell and attain Heaven after
death.
Many people regard their own denomination or faith group within their own religion to possess total religious truth; other denominations
are seen to exhibit some error; other religions are often considered to be in serious error and are sometimes viewed as in opposition to the truth.
Within evangelical Christianity, other religions are sometimes referred to as
being led by Satan or some of his
demons.
There are three main methods of viewing other denominations and religions:
Extreme Particularism: This is the belief that one's
own faith group possesses all of the truth, as revealed to their religion,
alone, by God. Other faith groups and religions worship demons and are led
by Satan.
Exclusivism: One's own group possesses the truth as God revealed
it to them. Other religious
groups are in serious error, and place the latter's members in grave
peril regarding salvation.
In recent years, some theologians have objected to the term "exclusivism"
because of its negative connotation. They prefer the term "particularism"
Within Christianity, this belief system takes two main forms:
Agnostic Particularism: Salvation is attained through belief
in Christ alone as Lord and Savior. However, it may be possible for
those who have not heard of Christianity, the Gospel or Jesus Christ to
be saved and attain Heaven after death.
Traditional Particularism: Salvation is attained only through
an explicit knowledge and faith in Christ. The vast majority of humans
-- even those who have never heard of Jesus -- will spend eternity being
tortured in Hell
Inclusivism: One's own group possesses the truth; other religious
groups contain parts of the truth. The latter's believers are less likely to be
saved.
Pluralism: All group's beliefs and practices are equally valid,
when interpreted within their own culture. Salvation is for all.
Speaking generally, in most of the world's main religions:
The liberal/progressive wing accepts pluralism,
The conservative wing teaches inclusivism, and
The very conservative wing believes in exclusivism, and
The fundamentalist wing teaches extreme particularism.
Unfortunately, the term "religious pluralism" has other unrelated meanings.
One is as a synonym for religious diversity: the fact that there exists a
variety of religious beliefs in a given country or other geographic area. Thus,
religious pluralism in North America -- in the sense of the U.S. and Canada being
religiously diverse -- is a statement of fact.
The other meaning of "religious diversity:" that all
religious are equally valid, when evaluated within their culture of origin.
The hyperlinks below were used to prepare the
above essay, but are not necessarily still valid today.
David B. Barrett, et al., "World Christian Encyclopedia : A
Comparative Survey of Churches and Religions in the Modern World," Oxford
University Press, (2001). Read
reviews or order this book