THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

THE RELIGIONS AS HUMAN ANSWER TO A GOD WHO REVEALS HIMSELF



* Indication of biography about this matter for personal deepening:

. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, 1962-1965, Vatican City. Nostra Aetate. Available in, http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_decl_19651028_nostra-aetate_en.htmlAccess on 08 de dec. 2017.
. ______. Dignitatis Humanae. Available in:
. CONSENTINO, Francesco. Immaginare Dio. Assisi: Cittadella Editrice, 2010.
. LA BIBBIA DI GERUSALEMME. Bologna: Centro Editoriale Dehoniano, 1977.
. LIBÂNIO, João Batista. Deus e os homens: os seus caminhos. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1990.
. _______. Teologia da revelação a partir da modernidade. São Paulo: Loyola, 1992.
. PANGRAZZI, Arnaldo (Org). Salute, malattia e morte nelle grandi religioni. Torino: Ed. Camilliane, 2002.
. PANIKER, Thomas. Theology of revelation and faith.   Available in,
. SANNA, I. Teologia come esperienza di Dio: la prospettiva cristologica di Karl Rahner. Brescia: Queriniana, 1997.
. SPINELLA, G. Si può parlare di rivelazione nelle altre religioni? Disponível em:
. TEIXEIRA, Faustino. Deus não tem religião. Disponível em: http://www.ihu.unisinos.br/?catid=0&id=553135. Acesso em 26 dez. 2017.
. TORRES QUEIRUGA, Andrés. A revelação de Deus na realização humana. São Paulo: Paulus, 1995.
.  _______. O diálogo das religiões. São Paulo: Paulus, 1997.
. _______. Repensar o pluralismo: da inculturação à inreligionação. Concilium, Petrópolis-RJ, n. 319, p.110-113, jan. 2007.
. _______ . Repensar a revelação. São Paulo: Paulinas, 2010.
. VIGIL, José María. Escritos sobre pluralismo.  Disponível em:
. WIKIPEDIA. Hierofania. Disponível em: https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierofania. Acesso em 07 de dez. 2017.


       God reveals himself for love and kindness, making himself close to the human being. It is by a divine intuition that human being makes the discovery of this presence and, in this sense, the religions have contributed a lot. It is in them that the human being manages to express his deepest yearnings, his greatest secrets, desires, dreams, aspirations and needs, making the experience of the God that is met as a presence that fulfils. It is from the meaning (or meanings) of the word religion that we can understand the role of this institution in the relationship between the God who reveals himself and the human being who receives and responds to this revelation in the measure of his creature capacity.[1] “The Christian writer Lattanzio derives the concept religion from the word religare (= restoration of the relationship between the human being and God); Durkheim defines it as “a common system of beliefs and practices concerning sacred things.”[2] Although they are two distinct positions, they bring a common element regarding the purpose of religion as it was expressed in the Second Vatican Council in the Declaration Nostra Aetate:


Men expect from different religions a response to the hidden enigmas of the human condition, which yesterday as today deeply disturb the human heart: What is man? What is the meaning and purpose of life? (...) What is the path to true happiness? What is death, judgment, and retribution after death? What, then, is the ultimate and ineffable mystery that surrounds our existence, from which we take our origin and to which we are going? (NA 1).

         One of the great truths that the religions make us to reflect is that the human being - by his origin, structure and destiny - is “capable of God”. This means that by his very nature, the human being has the capacity to accept divine revelation/closeness[3] and, even though he is finite, he is considered “the being of transcendence” because his entire existence is projected to a horizon far beyond which he can encompass.[4] That is why, of all the experiences that the human being lives, none involves him so much with this mystery as the religious experience does. But although we regard the religious experience as a “place” - and a “theological place” - where the reality and the will of God are manifested, does not mean the hidden mystery that is revealed therein becomes totally transparent.[5]

        From the beginning of the world, woman and man were born, supported, and promoted by the unconditional love of the God of revelation. The religions, indeed, seek to configure visibly this discovery by being “aware of the presence of the divine in the world;”[6] this presence, which is neither passive nor static. On the contrary, it involves the whole universe in a process of continuous renewal. “The religious person interprets his search for God as provoked by a previous encounter with him and in which God Himself took the initiative.”[7] In other words, the religious experience is stimulated by God, who anticipates himself in the human heart, arousing in it the desire for him. That is why the true religious person always proclaims that it is God who speaks, loves, pleads, forgives, supports, and that the person just responds in faith, prayer, praise and worship.[8] In this sense, religion has been a precious mediator, because

(...) makes to resonate within the human being the voice of God that animates him, calls him to life and communion, to a fullness that begins in the history and that responds to the desire for eternity of every human being. It transmits elements that enable people to do meaningful experiences. Answer to them the deepest and most serious questions of life, such as the presence of evil, of death, of iniquity, on the one hand, and the desire for happiness, for eternity on the other.[9]

      In the religion, God is experienced as ‘transcendence’ that comes out to meet the human being, facilitating a totalizing experience. Therefore, every religion is considered revealed.[10] The reason for this is that each one presents itself as an ‘awareness of the presence of God’ in the individual, in the society and in the world. A real and authentic religion will always provide experience in a double sensation: of transcendence, before the mystery that is present in it; and of immanence, while we see that this making itself present refers to the concrete existence of the human being.[11] Therefore, Andrés Torres Queiruga states that

the human being never feels the creator of this experience, but his recipient. The manifestations are diverse, however they always have something in common: they are lived as a gift that is received, as a gift that is welcomed. And, precisely, as this gift refers to the discovery of the divine that manifests itself, they are revelation.[12]

       The elements that describe the divine manifestation, in the different religious forms, obey determined contexts.[13] Objects, for example, which in some religions are sacred, for others, mean nothing. “Plurality of religions demands plurality of revelatory mediations, each legitimate in its own way, depending on the graciousness of God’s gift and the originality of human response.”[14] In ancient religions, the hierophanies[15]happen in a well-narrated and rich way, through rites, myths, animals, plants, the most different objects, places, people, symbols, etc. A concrete example in this sense is the African Traditional Religions. Thus, the revealing process takes place

(...) from the rite in which the divine primordial action is introduced, to the myth, which converts the experience of the Sacred into a fabulous expression; from prayer, where the Divine becomes a dialogical presence, to the moral action, where it is simple presence that commands, protects or judges; from the temple and the sacred places, where the presence is configured, to the thousand modalities of hierophanies, in which appears the infinite richness of his face, or even the taboo, in which the negative aspect of his power is manifested.[16]

         In this way, religions are human welcome and response to the real and revealing divine presence.[17] Although God, in His manifestation, does not limit himself to these aspects, cited above, He also uses them to communicate with the people, revealing to them his designs of love. These designs are being assimilated by the faithful of the various religions through the life-giving means offered to them aiming a personal and community fulfilment. That is why Andés Torres Queiruga considers that “all religions are true. Not because everything in them (...) is, but in the real measure in which they welcome the presence.”[18] We know that together with praiseworthy deeds, the religions often exhibit theoretical aberrations and practical perversions, but above all,

(...) are complexities totalities of response to the divine, ‘with their different forms of religious experience, their own myths and symbols, their theological systems, their liturgies and their art, their ethics and lifestyles, their scriptures and traditions- all elements that interact and reinforce each other. And these different totalities constitute diverse human responses, in the context of the different cultures or forms of human life, to the same divine reality, infinite and transcendent.[19]

          As we know, the revelation did not appear as a word made, an oracle of divinity heard by a seer or as if it were a divine saying, according to the traditional conception, “but as a living experience, as a ‘taking conscience’ from the suggestions and needs of what was around and supported in the mysterious contact with the sacred.”[20]Also the author Francisco Consentino agrees that revelation is not about communication of supernatural ideas or truths, but about a “process involving the divine life that invites the human being to a relationship with God in which to find his deepest identity.”[21]

       The sense of revelation will be more intensely experienced if, behind the natural element and the abundance of gifts received, the people can discover the God who gives them and makes them to happen uninterruptedly. The religious experience, with all its elements, not only helps the human being to “realize” the presence of God, but also makes him live according to the provocation of this revealing presence. In other words, the religious human being is gradually “modelled” according to the type of religious experience he/she does: “how not to admire the spiritual testimony and ascetic effort of the great Hindu rishi, the Sufi Islam or devotion and reverence the only living God.”[22]It is Also admirable the testimony of so many people who from the very beginning of the Christian life have been contributed to the building of a more humane and fraternal society following the example of their teacher Jesus Christ, in whom God reveals himself fully and totally.

        Therefore, the revelation of God has no boundaries, that is, God is free to reveal himself in other spaces, because his love is without borders.[23] It is his absolute freedom that leads him to choose when, where, how and to whom to reveal himself. Each revealing experience can be different from place to place, from generation to generation, from religion to religion and even from person to person. When God reveals Himself, He does not follow any fixed rubrics and cannot force us to follow any[24]. Even our own freedom has its roots in his loving way of revealing himself, as the Council expresses very well in its Declaration Dignitatis Humanae: “Religious freedom has its foundation in the human dignity (...) What is more, this doctrine of freedom has roots in divine revelation” (DH 9). It is God's will to reveal himself in and through religions so that his billions of sons of daughters may experience in their faith his constant aids. That is, no one can claim to close in his limited conceptions the unlimited and creative way of God revealing Himself.

 Author: Josuel dos Santos Boaventura PSDP - Fr Ndega
Theological review: ThD Fr Luis Carlos Susin
English review: EdM Mary Kung'u



[1] According to Karl Rahner, “what the human being perceives is always automatically linked with the category and structures of his cognitive capacity” (RAHNER, K. apud SANNA, I. Op. cit., p. 107).
[2] PANGRAZZI, Arnaldo (Org). Op. cit., p. 5.
[3]“For Karl Rahner, if there is a revelation of God in the mentioned sense, then the human creature has in its anthropological structure the conditions to be open and oriented to such a revelation and to be able to receive it”(CONSENTINO, F. Op. cit., p. 19).
[4] Cf. Ibid., p. 20. Continuing his reflection, this author expresses himself on the following page: “If the human being is open and oriented to the revelation of God and this last one means among other things a fulfilment and full realization of the human being, then, even implicitly, we affirm that God is a human need while the human being needs God” (Ibid., p. 21).
[5] Cf. PANIKER, T. Op. cit., p. 2.
[6] TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. A revelação de Deus na realização humana, p. 21.
[7] MARTIN VELASCO, J. apud TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. A revelação de Deus na realização humana, p. 22.
[8] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 214.
[9] LIBÂNIO, J. B. Teologia da Revelação a partir da Modernidade, p. 268.
[10] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar a revelação, p. 173. The concept of revelation that we seek to consider here is largely developed by the Theology of Religious Pluralism. It is a current paradigm of reflection that invites the theology to break with the traditional schemes, considering the positivity of other religions. This is a task that requires the theologian’s openness and courage. The author Faustino Teixeira sees this reality with great optimism when considering that we are “living an unprecedented situation, a situation that arouses a new sensitivity, leading us to recognize the presence of God and His grace in the various religious traditions.” (TEIXEIRA, F. Op. cit., p.2). In this same line, we also quote an excerpt from the writings of the author José María Vigil, which says that “starting from the foundation of a new concept of ‘revelation’ more realistic, less dictated and more human, the TRP discovers the God’s presence acting in all peoples, a God who, if He is, He is of all, and of no one exclusively. Religions are not all equals - of course - they are not all the same, but they respond, by their own and particular paths, to a basic human need of searching for the dimension of existential depth.” (VIGIL, J. M. Op. cit., p. 86).
[11] “Each religion has its own history and its own status, but what unites them and is at the centre of their attention is the concern for the salvation of the human being and his encounter with the transcendent, God and the Divine.” (PANGRAZZI, A. (Org). Op. cit., p. 5).
[12] TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. A revelação de Deus na realização humana, p. 21.
[13]Taking as reference the Indian context, the author Thomas Paniker expresses like that: “In our context of religious pluralism we realize that what is normative in every revelatory experience is a genuine experience of the transcendence and the encounter of a God who meets our transcendental quest with a loving self-gift.” (PANIKER, T. Op. cit., p. 7)
[14]Ibid., p. 7.
[15]According to Wikipedia, the word Hierophany comes from the Greek hieros (ἱερός) which means sacred, and “faneia” (φαίνειν) means manifestation; therefore, can be defined as the act of manifestation of the sacred. Who first used this term was Mircea Eliade in his book Traitéd' histoire des religions (1949). This revealing phenomenon is very much in tune with the context of the people involved, as the theologian João Batista Libânio (in memory) expresses very well: “The historical and cultural moment of a people is decisive for their hierophanies. Thus the nomadic people, who lived longer from hunting, were obsessed by the figure of the beast. Either they sacralised some animal, usually ferocious, or invoked a ‘Lord of the animals’ (...) Other people already sedentarized, involved with agriculture, surround the nature of sacred mysteries with rites of fecundity or fertilities with deifications of natural phenomena or of stars” (LIBÂNIO, J. B. Deus e os homens..., p. 142s).
[16] Id. Repensar a revelação, p.25s.
[17] Cf. TORRES QUEIRUGA, A. Repensar o pluralismo: da inculturação à inreligionação., p. 112.
[18] Ibid., p. 112
[19] Id. O diálogo das religiões, p. 16.
[20] Id. Repensar a revelação, p. 71.
[21] CONSENTINO, F. Op. cit., p. 19.
[22] SPINELLA, G. Op. cit., p. 3.
[23] “In truth I am realizing that God does not discriminate people, but accepts who fears and practices the justice of any people to whom he/she belongs” (Act, 10, 34-35).
[24] Cf. PANIKER, T. Op. cit., p.7.

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