“Cathedrals often, and perhaps always, contain intentional irregularities that mean that God alone is perfect and capable of perfection; that human works, like man himself, are necessarily imperfect. And this applies to the whole universe, therefore to all that is not God; “what do you call me good?” said Christ. It should therefore come as no surprise that this principle also encompasses the realm of the sacred… and above all the religions themselves.”
This book is intended for anyone who wants to understand in depth what a true religion is, its positive aspects, namely its supernatural character, but also its limitations, because one religion is not another. It is divided into three parts: I) General Doctrine, II) Christianity and III) Islam.
Foreword
I. General doctrine
The decisive intuition
The ambiguity of exotericism
The 2 problems: predestination and evil
On the trail of the notion of eternity
II. Christianity
Complexity of dogmatism
Christian differences
The Headquarters of Sapience
III. Islamism
Islam and the consciousness of the Absolute
Remarks on dialectical antinomism
Diversity of routes
Transcendence and Immanence
in the spiritual economy of Islam
The problem of delimitations
The Mystery of the Prophetic Substance