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Is There a Written Tradition?

The Search for God Page 5.4

If we want to communicate our thoughts consistently, we write them down. Philosophers, other than the Gadfly of Athens, took time to document their thoughts. We should expect that a rational, intelligent God would expect anyone he communicated with to write down what is said.

As you can see, most world religions display this important distinction.

The reason neo-paganism is eliminated here is even though the roots are old, the written tradition is modern, so there are no old texts that trace their lineage prior to 500 BC that are in use today.

For African traditional religions, most have an oral tradition rather than written one, and no written tradition going back several millennia. 

Again, if this does not seem inherently rational then please read the following:

ReligionYear FoundedWritten Tradition
Secular/Nonreligious/Agnostic/AtheistVery OldYes
JudaismApprox 3700 BCYes
HinduismApprox 2000 BCYes
Chinese traditional religionApprox 1000 BCVaries
ZoroastrianismApprox 1000 BCYes
JainismApprox 800 BCYes
BuddhismApprox 600 BCYes
Ethnic religions excluding some in separate categoriesApprox 1000 BCVaries
African traditional religionsApprox 1000 BCNo
AnimismVery OldNo
Neo-PaganismVery OldNo
table content “Wikipedia

What Next?

  • What is the crucial concept?
    • Intelligent, rational beings should demand communication that is consistent and rational in a written format. 
  • Why is that significant?
    • This is a demand I place upon God, who, if he is all knowing and creator of humankind, should understand this importance for widespread dissemination. 
  • If you agree, the next steps.
  • If you disagree, please consider reading.
    • Why is a Written Religious Tradition Important?
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