Many questions, few answers
From the Bhakti List Archives
• August 4, 1998
Most of us who are seekers have many questions for which there seems to be no satisfactory, logicals answers. It is difficult for the intellect to accept that a ready-made answer may not exist in a form which is cognizable to the logical mind. An atheist for more than forty years of his life, British author CEM Joad was rudely awakened by the mass killings of innocents during World War II and the utter helplessness of humanity to prevent it. Members may perhaps be interested in perusing the following extract from his book: GOD AND EVIL: Like so many other introspective persons, Joad too battled with the enigma for which there is no satisfactory solution: the obtrusiveness of evil and the absence of a logical explanation for its power and its continued existence in an universe owing its origin to God, who is omnipotent and benevolent. After arguing convincingly in the first part of his book that every explanation to reconcile the two was bound to fail in logic, he proceeds to state (at page 112 of his book): " Â…..the conclusions of the intellect deny that the orthodox God of the religious hypothesis - omnipotent and benevolent, could have been the creator of the world; and deny it precisely because of the fact of evil. But if the intellect denies what the heart demands, what then? ...perhaps the deadlock is a sign of, perhaps it is even a punishment for, intellectual arrogance...The considerations which have set my mind working again on the problems of religion are of an emotional order..the emotions are those connected with inadequacy. The life that lacks religion lacks, so I have come to feel, fullness and roundness, and the desire to find that true which I have always believed to be false, to know something of that which I have thought to be unknowable grows as the years pass by. One is dismayed by the evil at large in the world and in oneself, depressed and humiliated by the inadequacy of one's efforts to cope with it, humiliated then by the inadequacy of one's own self. It is from precisely such a feeling of humiliation that, religious writers have often urged, the search for and need of God, take their rise. What is more, the seeker who is inspired by such a mood may not be wholly without hope of succeeding in his quest. For alienated by intellectual pride God, they (the Seers) have assured us, draws nearer to those who approach Him in humbleness of spirit." Blessed indeed are those whose heart is filled with love for God and the intellect is surrendered to him unconditionally. Strangely, having no questions, they have all the answers! Adiyen Dasan MK Krishnaswamy
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