John Hick (“The Fifth Dimension: An Exploration of the Spiritual Realm”) adopts a pluralist perspective according to which all religions are “true myths”. Religious dogmas should not be absolutized as infallible, as they are all culturally determined expressions of the transcategorial and ineffable reality that is the “fifth dimension”. Thus, they are all different human responses to the same ultimate transcendent reality. Nevertheless, because he views myths as mere “expanded metaphors” he rejects the view that they, through their symbolic content, can express deep truths that cannot be expressed in any other way (ch. 26). How, then, can they express the ineffable? It is a glaring self-contradiction!
The transcategorial ultimate reality, in itself beyond the scope of our human conceptual systems, is central to Hick’s theology. But the transcendent as radical alterity is a view that stems from Eastern mysticism. Most Western theologians, such as Thomas Aquinas, reject this view of the divine. After all, it is a contradiction in terms, to say: “I know that the divine is unknowable!” Despite the fact that he relies on the mystical theologies of Adavaita Vedanta and such greats as Pseudo-Dionysius and Meister Eckhart, Hick concludes that union with God is merely a metaphorically unitive state in which self-concern of the ego has been transcended (ch. 17).
According to the mythic perspective, Jesus as truly God and truly man is only a metaphor, as he was really only a greatly gifted man. Hick hopes that liberal-progressive Christianity can reconfigure itself to this “religiously realistic” view (ch. 26). The practical function of religion lies in promoting spiritual growth (ch. 10). Religion fulfils an ethical function: “What we need to know is how to live here and now. And it is noticeable that whereas the metaphysical questions about which we can only speculate divide the religions, their basic moral principles unite them” (ch. 25). As I see it, Hick tries to convince Christianity to commit suicide. Despite all, I give the book two stars, because it is well-informed and pleasant to read.