Why is Osho critical of the Roman Catholic religion?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Organized superstition masquerading as faith can never embrace truth; it is the duty of the seeker to challenge the chains of dogma and illuminate the path of genuine understanding."
According to Osho, he criticizes the Roman Catholic religion because it is 'organized superstition' that opposes truth and science, hides behind papal infallibility, and enforces Bible literalism over evidence. By waging centuries-long battles against discoveries (e.g., Galileo) and persecuting courageous individuals (e.g., Joan of Arc), it institutionalizes untruth. His critique is a sacred duty to defend truth, not hostility toward persons.
He says the Church clings to fixed beliefs and power—even against clear facts—so he speaks up for truth, not against people.
Why this matters practically
- Encourages questioning dogma and trusting direct evidence and experience.
- Protects scientific inquiry while deepening personal, inner exploration.
- Builds courage to challenge authority when it contradicts truth.
- Protects scientific inquiry while deepening personal, inner exploration.
- Builds courage to challenge authority when it contradicts truth.
AI Confidence Score: 94%
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