Ελληνικά για το θέμα: Από τους Μπαχάι στην Ορθοδοξία
In
  a nutshell: I was born and raised Hindu, then was Baha’i for 5 years  
(2002-2007) before becoming Christian and finding the Orthodox church.
How  exactly did this happen?
It should be noted I wasn’t  reading 
about hardcore theology of various religions – I was reading the  
writings of various spiritual masters, mystical works, mythology, stuff 
 like that.  I had no urge to look deeper into this mystery of how there
  were all these different religions, or of looking more closely at the 
 differences; I thought it was a waste of time, foolish.
One thing I  didn’t realize though, was 
that that whole blind men and elephant  analogy?  It assumes that no 
particular religion truly has an  understanding of God – well, I 
understood that, but it didn’t really  bother me.  It never occurred to 
me that possibly one of the religions  actually sees the whole elephant,
 rather than only seeing a part.  The  idea was that it didn’t matter – 
you didn’t need to understand the  elephant as an elephant to get to 
God, in fact maybe it was humanly  impossible anyway, for people to 
conceive of these things.  It never  occurred to me that God might have 
ever approached us with a very  particular way that He wanted us to 
approach Him, rather my focus was on  our imperfect selves trying to 
reach towards God.
Then I came  across the Baha’i Faith – 
it claimed to reveal the elephant itself,  saying that in the past, 
people were only ready to be exposed to  whatever particular part God 
saw was fit at the time.  So all the  previous religions were chapters 
in one book, leading up to this chapter  called the Baha’i Faith that 
reveals the unity of all religions.  But  not in a mysterious way – it 
sought to provide distinct proofs for this.
This is what finally made me start 
looking analytically and critically  at all the world religions, 
including the Baha’i Faith, to see how  God’s web of different religions
 were really and truly connected.  This  was key – until I started being
 more demanding, I was undiscerning in my  happiness to just accept all 
religions as they were, like different  flavors of ice cream.  I enjoyed
 what flowed; I ignored what clashed,  figuring it was just to be 
expected, realistically.
Different people  will see through 
different lenses.  But as a Baha’i, I was told that if I  looked really 
hard, I would see that all the different religions really  were one, and
 furthermore that all of them awaited a Messianic figure  whom Baha’is 
believed to have come in the person of Baha’u’llah in the  19th century,
 founder of the Baha’i Faith.  This fascinated me – and  both to better 
educate myself and also to be able to teach members of  other religions 
about the Baha’i Faith, I started studying.
Now  rather than leaving it all up to 
mystery, I said the Baha’i faith had  specific explanations as to how 
all the religions are different paths to  one God, right?  This was 
critical – in the Hindu mindset, I would  never had tools/measuring 
sticks that I expected to actually work in  this undertaking, so I would
 never seriously have undertaken it, or  would not have had a way of 
disproving/testing/evaluating any of these  beliefs about religions 
being essentially equal.  At best, I would have  prayed like Sri 
Ramakrishna, who claims that Jesus, Mohammed, and other  figures came to
 him when he prayed, and so he believed whomever you  prayed to, God 
would come to you in that form – he experienced that, so  he believed 
that, never thinking maybe it was a delusion.
As Orthodox  monks say, you can have delusions, or you can even have demons that  approach you as angels of light!
Anyway,
 back to the story.  The Baha’i  Faith stated that all the different 
religions have the same,  unchanging, essential, ethical and spiritual 
teachings about God and  soul and our purpose, but have different social
 teachings about  externals, or even about things like marriage – these 
changing teachings  are meant to suit the particular people/culture/time
 to whom the  religion is brought by a Prophet/Manifestation.  However, 
sometimes even  the unchanging spiritual teachings are lost or corrupted
 over time, and  that also explains for some of the differences.
Well.   So there I was, studying along, 
when I hit on just one event that  could not be explained away by Baha’i
 cleverness.  The Resurrection.   Here at last, was the only and most 
effective measuring stick of truth,  to sort through the claims of 
religions unity.
The Baha’i Faith, Islam,  and 
Christianity clearly taught different things about who Jesus was.  Well,
 the Baha’i Faith claimed to be able to reconcile these  differences, 
but it was too contrary to all evidence.  Christians  claimed that Jesus
 was God, was the Son of God, and all this stuff about  a trinity, which
 really I had no idea what they were talking about.
They claimed this resurrection, which 
made no sense to me – not that I  didn’t believe Jesus couldn’t rise 
from the dead if he were God, but I  had no idea what possible relevance
 that could have, since I didn’t  know/understand about the Fall, sin, 
the Final Resurrection – I assumed  these were all myths, with no more 
relevant deep meaning than a fairy  tale, except maybe metaphorical 
spiritual meanings.  I wasn’t even  interested, because I never 
understood what importance that event should  have to me.
No Christian had ever explained that to 
me – they’d just  say crazy stuff like, “I’ve been washed in the blood 
of the Lamb, and  now I’m saved!  Jesus died for your sins!  Don’t you 
want to be saved?”  then they’d paint portraits of Hell – it all made 
zero sense to me, just  as though someone said, “My red balloon popped 
and then candy canes  fell out of the sky, your rabbit is winking at me,
 doesn’t all this make  you want to buy a new Nissan?”
I am not exaggerating – this nutshell  
“Gospel message” makes absolutely no sense to a non-Christian, no real  
meaningful sense, anyway.  You just have no idea what they are so  
excited about – so Jesus rose from the dead, big whoop, so what?  Good  
for him, but….so what?  He healed people…he was loving, kind,  innocent,
 born of a virgin, sinless…. so what?  I didn’t even grow up  with same 
concept of sin as Christians do, so “sinless” vs. “sinner”  didn’t mean 
the same things to me as to a Christian anyway.  In other  words, we 
lacked the same language/doctrine/context, so the whole  message was 
being lost in translation.
The same things happen when  Americans 
decide they are interested in Hindu things – I am always  suspicious 
when I hear people throwing around words like karma and  dharma, etc.  
Do they really understand what they are talking about? It  also makes me
 suspicious that I here more Americans talking about  tantric sex and 
other exotic things, whereas the Indian Hindus I knew  were just taught 
to be devoted to God and pray and go to the temple.
Sex was a taboo topic, maybe too taboo. 
Anyway, the point of this  tangent is, I always felt very misunderstood 
by Christians who had these  wild orgy type images of what it must be 
like for my family to be  Hindu, and I felt almost equally misunderstood
 by Westerners who  rejected their Christian upbringing to come to 
Hinduism thinking along  similar lines.
Getting back to the story:  Since I 
didn’t have a  firm grasp on what Christians were saying, it was easy to
 let other  religions explain it to me.  Hindus told me that Christ was 
an avatar  just like any other Hindu avatar, or that Christ was actually
 a great  yogi who had achieved self-realization.  Indeed, when I read 
the Gospels  as Hindu, that’s exactly how it came across when I was left
 to  interpret things myself (so much for sola scriptura).
The Baha’i Faith  stated that Jesus was a
 Prophet/Manifestation, just like Mohammed and  Baha’u’llah, Moses, 
Abraham, Zoroaster, Krishna, Buddha, Adam (I knew  nothing about the Old
 Testament, so I had no idea that the specific way  in which these 
figures were being likened to each other was highly  dubious).
I found it in scripture – NO physical  
resurrection.  Mohammed taught that Jesus was not even crucified – how  
could a prophet of God be given a shameful death?   No, he wasn’t  
crucified at all, God took him up to heaven instead, and someone else  
was crucified in his place and made to appear to be him, tricking all  
who viewed it.  And yet, if they were tricked to think it was Jesus, why
  are they being chastised by God for believing it was Jesus?
That  question is not answered, and yet 
this frightening Jesus is waiting till  the end times to return and 
break all the crosses, judge all the  Christians for believing in it, 
and to proclaim Islam as the true  religion after all.  In fact, 
Mohammed teaches that Jesus was a Muslim.   Okay, this was getting too 
bizarre even for me, with my ability to  rationalize any contradiction 
thanks to Baha’i mental gymnastics skills.
Baha’u’llah said that Mohammed meant 
that Jesus’ spirit could never be  crucified, only his body – but I 
really felt that Mohammed meant  exactly what he adamantly said…. so 
that made the first crack in my  faith in Baha’u’llah’s teachings.  
Also, the Baha’i Faith sought to  explain the true meaning of the 
trinity, whereas Mohammed ranted about  the trinity concept being a huge
 mistake – and described a false  understanding of it to boot.  So this 
stuff wasn’t adding up.
To  make it even more shocking, I 
started reading about evidence for  Christ’s resurrection – not only did
 I feel there was more evidence  supporting this event than we have for 
other events which we take for  granted as being historically true, from
 reading the Gospels and knowing  the horrible deaths these apostles 
underwent, it became very clear to  me that they really believed in a 
physical resurrection, and they were  dying for something more than this
 “be nice to each other” message.  The  Baha’i explanation was that 
superstitions arose about the nature of  Christ and his resurrection, 
whether it was shortly after Christ’s death  or as later belief, which 
caused people to re-interpret these  historical happenings, to give a 
false interpretation of the Bible.
Paul himself is quoted by Baha’is as 
evidence against the physical  resurrection of Jesus or anybody else for
 that matter.  I’ve even heard a  Baha’i quote the story about doubting 
Thomas as evidence against the  resurrection – pointing out that though 
Thomas asked to place his  fingers into he wounds, when Christ appeared 
and offered, it doesn’t  state that Thomas actually DID…. the 
implication being that Jesus was  not truly physically present and that 
had Thomas tried, he wouldn’t have  managed to touch the wounds – guess 
Jesus just outsmarted him!
Probably the only reason he “tricked” 
him was because (as with the rest  of Christ’s ministry, as described by
 the Baha’i faith) miracles were  necessary for these backwards people. 
 But later prophets, like Mohammed  and Baha’u’llah, didn’t give 
miracles, not because they didn’t have  power, but because people were 
supposed to be more mature than that. 
Anyway,  the trouble is, as some Baha’is
 were forgetting, according to Baha’i  scripture, there was no physical 
resurrection or reappearance of the  material form of Jesus at all 
whatsoever.  So the real, official Baha’I  explanation is simply that 
the resurrection only means that the  disciples regained their faith and
 courage after 3 days to go out and  proclaim the Gospel.  It was thus a
 “spiritual resurrection”.
The  Gospel (according to Baha’is) was 
simply Christ’s spiritual teachings of  how to lead a good life and to 
love God, and that he himself was a  Prophet/Manifestation, so better 
listen up.  And any tales of any other  type of resurrection or Gospel 
were the result of later  misinterpretations.  However, Baha’u’llah 
states that the Bible is not  corrupted; rather it is wrongly 
interpreted (unlike Muslims, who believe  the Bible text has been 
corrupted itself – another difference between  Baha’is and Muslims, 
despite Baha’i claims that both religions are one).   So basically, the 
Gospels are supposed to be full of allegory,  including the story of the
 resurrection.  Here’s the thing though, there  are glitches.
For example, Baha’is believe the virgin 
birth actually  happened (Muslims believe this too).  The 
healing/feeding miracles –  Baha’is say some happened, but they should 
always be understood in a  spiritual sense, since that is what is 
important, not these material  things, of course! (Muslims just believe 
Jesus was granted the ability  of miracles by God).  The resurrection of
 Christ though – this miracle  is flat out denied.
Why is this the only miracle that is 
taboo to both  Muslims and Baha’is?  I wanted to know – why would all 
the other  miracles be okay to believe, but not the resurrection?  Also,
 if the  Baha’i teaching that the New Testament is mainly allegory and 
spiritual  teachings, not literal at all…. well, why did it read so  
matter-of-factly?
It doesn’t read like a mystical, 
symbolic work at all  – it is very direct, simple, and to the point.  I 
simply couldn’t  believe that it was not intended to mean exactly what 
it said – and that  the earliest martyrs did not believe in this 
resurrection – in fact,  based on my research, the resurrection seemed 
to have been the most  important part of the story, not relegated to the
 back-burner behind  Christ’s spiritual teachings, the way Baha’is would
 have it.  If it were  a false belief, what kind of God would corrupt 
the teachings so  quickly?  What would be the point?  And back again to 
the question –  what is the big deal about this resurrection?  Why is 
everyone seeming  fixated on this one crucial point that can’t be agreed
 on, that simply  must be denied by both Muslim and Baha’i scripture?  I
 mean, he’s  already being born from a virgin, so what if he also rose 
from the dead?
This  is what really made me start to 
feel suspicious that maybe the Gospel  was more than the good news that 
this great Prophet named Jesus had come  along to tell everyone to love 
each other and to love God.  Not to  belittle that message, but there 
was more to the story.  I didn’t know  what that whole message was, but I
 decided I ought to find out what all  this ranting and raving about the
 resurrection was all about and why I  should care.
By this point I had already seen all the
 holes  poked into the Baha’i Faith, so I officially resigned from the 
Baha’i  Faith on July 7, 2007, and became a “Christian” by default.  I 
know that  is really weird, but that’s exactly how it happened!  I guess
 I labeled  myself Christian, but I didn’t know really what the Gospel 
was about –  just that there was this guy Jesus who seemed to have been 
born of a  virgin and died and then lived, and everyone was excited 
about it.  It  wasn’t a religious experience or even a true 
understanding, so I don’t  know if I was really a Christian.  I do know 
that I don’t think any of  this would have happened if a Christian 
friend of mine hadn’t prayed for  me at that time – seemed like I was 
lost in my happy web of delusion  until after he prayed for me and it 
all came crashing down.
So that  gave me faith in this religion 
too.  Basically, for the past year since  resigning from the Baha’i 
Faith, I’ve just been studying.
I wanted to  find out what the original 
teachings of the apostles were, and what  Jesus really meant to say to 
us, since this entire journey had made me  keenly aware of the issue of 
corrupted teachings versus true teachings.   And lo and behold, it turns
 out there were tons of books written by  scholars ever since that event
 happened, trying to sort all of this out.
I was glad the books were there, but I 
was even more confused – if  this Resurrection was supposed to be so 
important, how could people have  lost the original message of what it 
meant and what Jesus really wanted  us to believe, what the apostles 
really taught?  Why were people today  still looking to uncover the 
original church of Biblical times (“based  on the latest research!”) – I
 mean, how in the heck could they have lost  that information if it was 
so important?  How could they go around  getting everyone (myself 
included) all riled up about worried about  this, and then not be able 
to tell us what we needed to know about it?
At  the time, I only had access to 
Protestant books, and they certainly  helped some, but they still left 
me feeling that a lot was unexplained  or random or didn’t make sense.  I
 didn’t really start to understand the  “Good News” until I was led to 
the Orthodox Church just this past  April, on Good Friday.
I was loaned the book “The Orthodox Church“,
 and  the rest was pretty much history – it convinced me that not only 
was  the original faith of the apostles uncorrupted, that in that same 
line  of reasoning/faith, the ancient church was still alive – and 
almost as  proof, that book finally made the Gospel start to make sense 
to me!  I  definitely believed in the importance of the Holy Tradition –
 I never  understood the sola scriptura thing I was reading in the 
Protestant  Books – they didn’t seem to realize there were large gaps in
 what they  considered to be simple teachings/knowledge, because they 
were all  interpreting according to some mysterious code that I hadn’t 
been  exposed to, but claiming it was just all “written in the Bible”. 
Having  read the New Testament first as a Hindu and then as a Baha’i, I 
knew  firsthand that there are all kinds of different ways to sincerely 
 misinterpret scripture.  So I was grateful to finally come to a church 
 that had the holy tradition guided by the Holy Spirit to explain 
things.
Also, to know what we don’t know too.  
My experience with the Baha’i  faith and investigation into corruptions,
 etc., had built up my faith in  what these earliest Christian people 
taught…. and I didn’t understand  why Protestants couldn’t have this 
same faith? They lacked faith, and  called it true faith.
I didn’t believe their idea that the 
church was  corrupted until the first Protestants showed up…. it 
reminded me of  the Baha’i way of thinking, a lack of faith, a hole 
which is later  stopped up with creations/hopes/interpretations of one’s
 own, all under  the false pretense of “true knowledge” and “faith”, 
when really they  seem to be weaving a web of their own liking, without 
even realizing it.   An unconscious denial of the power of the Holy 
Spirit, to either think  the Holy Spirit has checked out, is too 
mysterious to know His  workings, or to reduce His workings to only 
babbling, despite Jesus’  promise to send the Holy Spirit who would lead
 to all truth, these seem  like strange beliefs for people who really 
have faith in Christ and the  Bible to believe.
Another thing I noticed that the few 
times I  went to a Protestant non-denominational church prior to finding
 the  Orthodox church, while I liked the sermons and I learned to like 
some of  the songs, it distinctly felt like a memorial service for 
Christ.   Well, he did say, “do this in remembrance of me”, so that’s 
exactly what  it felt like…and the communion seemed really random.  
Like, well,  this was the eccentric thing that Christ wanted us to do, 
so let’s do  it!  I don’t think the members of the church thought it was
 eccentric,  but really – with no other meaning than the symbolic one, 
it just all  seemed kind or strange to me – like some antiquated 
practice that  withstood the test of time, the bread and wine eventually
 transformed to  a cracker the size of a cheezit and a shot of grape 
juice, the same way  the gladiatorial displays in the Roman coliseum 
have maybe been  transformed into modern day football games in stadiums.
  I am not saying  this at all to laugh about it or to make fun – I 
wasn’t amused, I was  just mystified, but willing to go along with it 
and figuring this was  just the way it was.
At the Orthodox church, it wasn’t like a
 memorial  service for someone who had passed on to the next world, it 
was worship –  worship the way Hindus worship, truly believing that God 
was present,  singing to God, not about him, not singing to ourselves, 
not singing for  fellowship, not worshiping his idea, but actually 
presenting worship as  a sacrifice within the presence of God.  – and 
not being casual in his  presence, but having a sense of holiness and 
respect  – not because  people wanted to be goody-two-shoes, but because
 if you actually believe  that God is present, you’ll be alert, rather 
than coming up with  excuses about how God shouldn’t care about this or 
that or the other,  but naturally wanting to do your best in the 
presence of God out of love  and respect and acknowledgment of his 
holiness.
I don’t know…I guess  I felt like, as 
much as I liked the Protestant church (the minister was  great!), I felt
 they were talking about something, about learning about  something, 
whereas at the Orthodox Church actually had it present.  I  also 
instinctively felt that the Orthodox Church housed the wisdom of  
elders, whereas the Protestant church housed the rebellious  
self-confidence of a teenager.
Also, whereas when I was growing up, I  
felt that Western Christians just looked down on Hindus as being  
completely wrong and ignorant, I felt the Orthodox church revealed the  
true way of worship, the true reaching out to God, that Hindus had been 
 trying to do.  It makes me think of what Paul said when he was  
in…Athens?  That there was this idol of the unknown God, that they  
Greeks already tried to worship, well Paul was here to finally teach  
them who this God was, in the same way I feel that Christianity has  
brought to light what Hindus have tried to do from times before the  
Christ the Light came to earth, if that makes much sense?
So maybe  Hindus do in the dark what 
Christians do in the light?  While fumbling  and some wrong perceptions 
can be experienced, learned, and propagate  even more of such wrong 
teachings in the dark, once you turn the light  on, you realize – wait a
 minute!  I thought I knew how this whole room  was set up and how 
everything worked, but in reality, now I see it is  different!  Some is 
the same, but now I can go about things the way they  were intended.
Now, I no longer hold an elephant’s 
trunk thinking it’s  a snake and once in a while wondering what else 
there is to it – now  the lights are on, and I can see that wow!  There 
is an elephant in the  room!  Such is the differing result of humans 
striving for truth in our  spiritual darkness, vs. what happens when God
 himself bringing us the  truth with his light.
While I think the stereotypical attitude
  of some Christians about Hinduism being totally corrupt and demonic 
and  awful is unrealistic, I have, now that I am beginning to finally  
understand some of Christianity (thanks again, to the Orthodox church), I
  am starting to see troubling things that I had been blind to before.
I  came across a  series of articles,
 which point out some fundamental differences  which may have seemed 
irrelevant to me before becoming Christian,  harmless when I first 
became Christian by default, and now are starting  to seem troubling in a
 very real way.  I don’t know if I agree 100% with  the articles, but 
they bring up some good points.
Right now, I  am still overwhelmed by 
trying to learn and participate as much as I can  as a catechumen – it’s
 all very recent, after I attended the EO church  for the first time on 
Good Friday, I became a catechumen on Pentecost –  so it’s all happening
 very fast.
But eventually, I would like to write  
about Hinduism and the Baha’i Faith from an Orthodox perspective.   
Particularly the Baha’i Faith – I have even kept the core books of the  
Baha’i faith, some which are hard to come by actually, so that in the  
future I’ll have them as reference.  If you’re at all interested in  
discussing more about this, the youngest of the world’s religions, a  
messianic one where the founder claims to be the Return of Christ, I’m  
planning on adding a thread about it in the OC group “Battling Christian
  cults”.
I feel very lucky to have been brought 
to the Orthodox  Church.  I feel lucky that it all happened so quickly 
once I became  Christian, involving little effort on my own part, 
whereas others have  searched many years as Christians before finding 
it.  I feel convinced  that it was definitely beyond my doing – I’m 
still amazed by it all.  It  has really made me believe in the power of 
sincere prayer in bringing  others to Christ.
Though I don’t feel ready to adequately 
bring anyone  else to Christ right now, I firmly believe in praying for 
that to  happen, praying really does have an effect that no amount of  
talking/reasoning can do.  I would never have come on my own I think,  
despite all the arguments I encountered – I really believe it was  
because my friend prayed for me, and God brought it about.
Until then, I  was very happily lost in 
illusions with a nimble way to deflect  anything a Christian might have 
said to me, to stay steeped in my  beautiful cocoon, and a very hip one,
 at that – one that seemed very  attractive on many sides.  God had to 
wake me up to make me realize that  beauty and wishful thinking are not 
the same as truth, which is even  more beautiful (and terrible!) than 
someone lost in his or her illusions  can even begin to imagine.  There 
is so much wrapped up inside of  Christianity that you really don’t 
suspect from the little flyers people  hand out on street corners:-)  At
 least that’s how it seems now that I  feel I am being guided in the 
Orthodox way.
I know this was a  really long-winded 
and winding story, but I hope that reading it will  remind you again to 
pray for others to come to Christ, pray that God  will lift them above 
the many, many layers of illusion and denial that  keep them from Him, 
even those who might sincerely think that they do  believe in Him when 
they really don’t.  That’s the state that I was in  when I was Hindu and
 Baha’i.
I was more interested in my concepts of 
 Him than in what He wanted me to believe.  Also I hope that this 
account  may have brought some points to mind that will help you become 
an even  better teacher of the Gospel when you are approaching someone 
who comes  from a completely non-Christian background.  To not only 
bring them to  Christ in a meaningful way, but to also bring them to the
 Orthodox  church, because I truly believe that Eastern Orthodox 
Christianity is so  incredible and can have a much stronger impact on a 
person  (particularly of Eastern background perhaps?), whereas the 
Western  approach to Christianity may just leave them wanting and 
wondering and  thirsting still.  This is a big generalization, but I 
worry that the  Protestant or Catholic way of spreading the Gospel can 
do more harm than  good, driving people away from Christ, whereas the 
Orthodox can bring  healing and joy and understanding, drawing people 
towards Christ.  Of  course what do I know, I may be totally (or at 
least partially) wrong  about this, but it’s a thought worth 
considering.
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