No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Personal revelations''' of [[God]] happen in different ways. |
'''Personal revelations''' of [[God]] happen in different ways. |
||
− | #People brought up in a [[Muslim]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[Allah]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. |
+ | #People brought up in a [[Islam|Muslim]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[Allah]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. |
#People brought up in a [[Christian]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[God]] or [[Jesus]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. |
#People brought up in a [[Christian]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[God]] or [[Jesus]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. |
||
#People brought up in a [[Hinduism|Hindu]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[Vishnu]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. Alternatively Hindus may feel they have personal relationships with any of the gods/goddesses of the Hindu [[Polytheism|Pantheon]]. |
#People brought up in a [[Hinduism|Hindu]] tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with [[Vishnu]] and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. Alternatively Hindus may feel they have personal relationships with any of the gods/goddesses of the Hindu [[Polytheism|Pantheon]]. |
Latest revision as of 00:19, 23 March 2018
Personal revelations of God happen in different ways.
- People brought up in a Muslim tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with Allah and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity.
- People brought up in a Christian tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with God or Jesus and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity.
- People brought up in a Hindu tradition may feel they have a personal relationship with Vishnu and/or had mystical experiences with the above deity. Alternatively Hindus may feel they have personal relationships with any of the gods/goddesses of the Hindu Pantheon.
Insert relevant deity/deities for other religions.
All the above are subjective and there is no objective evidence that any of these supposed divine relationships are real.