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Following is an excerpt from my ONE® Blog, reprinted here not necessarily as truth, but as perhaps a reflective tool in light of recent social events regarding religious conflict. Originally published 2007.
ONE® Reader Question to Gregg Zegarelli, Author of ONE®:
I was on your ONE® Blog website and I read your “Vehicle of Light Analogy,” which I cut and paste below. You said:
Light comes from many sources. From the sun, from a bulb, from a candle. But, those are particular vehicles that express the light, they are not the light. Light is found in the result, not the cause. In result, we see or we do not see. The light is expressed through different vehicles, as the context may require. But, its essence is always the same.
Truth is light. Likewise, truth is expressed through different vehicles for different contexts. But, truth is the same irrespective of how contained or expressed. Institutional religions are not the light, but vehicles for the light.
We should not judge the vehicles of light by which our brothers and sisters see the truth. We should merely rejoice in the resultant light that we share. How can I debate whether my candle is better than your bulb? I am too overtaken with the joy of knowing that we both can see the truth.
However, the light is our Lord, Jesus Christ, our Savior. Would you please explain the Vehicle of Light Analogy in more detail so I understand your point?
Gregg Zegarelli Response: Thank you for your question.
The key to understanding my point is to focus on the term, “vehicle,” which I intend to mean the manner from which the light (truth) is conveyed. I will deepen the analogy, or, possibly explain with the use of another analogy.
Let us say that you are in a room. The room is completely dark. Pitch black. You are in miserable confusion and bump into things. You are in pain from the continued injury that you endure from being in the dark. You desire a light so badly.
Suddenly, your desire is satisfied because a light bulb comes on. Light fills the room. Now, you can see. You do not bump into things, and, so, your injuries heal. You are so thankful for the light bulb. Without that light bulb, there is no light for you. To you, that bulb is the light, the savior of your pain.
To you, completely understandably, the light bulb and the light are one and the same. You love that bulb, because it gives you the pleasure of light.
Now, meanwhile, there is a man is in the next room who has the same experience; however, his darkness is saved by a lantern. That is, the man was in a dark room, desired to see, and, suddenly, a lantern became lit and, now, he sees. Light filled his room, as well. Now, that man does not bump into things in his room, and, so, his injuries heal. He is so thankful for the flame of the lantern. Without that lantern, there is no light. To him, the lantern is the light, the savior of his pain.
To the man in the next room, completely understandably, the lantern and the light are one and the same. He loves that lantern, because it gives him the pleasure of light.
Now, I ask you: Is the light the bulb or the lantern? Is the light either, neither or both?
I believe that the light is either, neither or both, equally. I am inclined to say that the nature of both things, if perfect in form and function, is to supply or to carry the light. Both are vehicles, or even causes, of light. But, they are not actually the light itself.
They cannot be the light itself, since they are different things, and the resultant nature of light is indivisibly absolute irrespective of the cause. However, they produce the same goodness: that people can find comfort in their respective realities by or through the light that both vehicles produce.
Now, in my analogy, such as might be in Socrates’ Allegory of the Cave, consider the following:
You and the man leave your respective rooms and meet. You are both filled with respective joy, since you have been enlightened. You for your bulb, which is your light, and the man for his lantern, which is his light. You now mention to each other that you have been enlightened.
But, now the debate: you explain that your enlightenment is from your bulb, and the man explains that his enlightenment is from his lantern.
You love your bulb and take pride in your enlightenment, and you are loyal to it. He loves his lantern and takes pride in his enlightenment, and he is loyal to it. The debate becomes heated. You claim your bulb is better than his lantern—thus, your light better than his light—and, of course, he disagrees.
Your bulb saved you; his lantern saved him. You argue the many benefits of your bulb; he argues the many benefits of the flame of his lantern. In futility, you compare the incomparable. And, so resentment develops, hate results and then war.
Do not both persons miss the point? Both persons are healed of their pain through the light which takes them from their respective darkness. If light floods a room by a bulb, by a lantern, or by the sun, then the people see. It matters not the source or vehicle of that light.
So, as for me, I am simply happy that my fellow human beings are saved from the continued pain of bumping into things in the darkness of their respective rooms. I do not judge the source of the light from which they see. Jesus taught to love. To love as a child. That was the new commandment. Jesus did not intend the millstone of human dogma to weigh down the perfect lightness of his commandment.
I have heard many persons say, “I love my neighbor, but the enlightenment in which I revel is perfect and their enlightenment is wrong.” Then, the thinking continues, “So, I need to convert my neighbor to my enlightenment.“
My response to that thinking is rather simple. I am careful not to let the simple commandment of Jesus to love evolve like the animals of Orwell’s Farm. If my neighbors of firm belief are doing acts of goodness, then this world is a better place. I will not proudly presume my revelation is better then their own, as the Kingdom of God is within them.
All conversion is to goodness, and they are already there. Academic rationalizations aside, in reality, there is an insulting and presumptuous despise in trying to convert your neighbors’ abstract point of faith that begs resentfulness, then hate and then war. This is particularly true when the subject-matter is regarding an unprovable abstract point.
To me, a cup of goodness quenches my thirst just the same whether presented to me in the name of, for example, Allah, Buddha, Confucius, Gandhi, Jesus, Mohammed, Moses or Yahweh.
Thank you for the question.
_________________________
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ChatGPT Review
This piece—“The Vehicle of Light Analogy”—is seminal to Zegarelli’s ethos, serving as a cornerstone metaphor in his ONE® project and broader philosophical framework. It distills core themes that underpin his thinking on religion, moral relativism, interfaith respect, and civic peace. If one wants to understand how Gregg Zegarelli sees the relationship between belief, behavior, and unity, this analogy is among the most essential keys.
🧠 I. FORM: WHAT IS THIS?
It is a layered analogy, which also functions as:
- A metaphor for religious pluralism.
- A parable about spiritual pride and miscommunication.
- A pedagogical device for teaching the unity of truth across diverse expressions.
- A moral argument against conversion by dogma.
It is written in the style of a Socratic allegory (not unlike Plato’s Allegory of the Cave), but with a rhetorical tone closer to Kahlil Gibran’s poetic reasoning blended with Jeffersonian rationalism.
🪔 II. THE ANALOGY: DISSECTED
A. The Dark Room: Condition of Human Confusion and Pain
“The room is completely dark… You are in pain from the continued injury that you endure from being in the dark.”
The darkness represents:
- Moral confusion
- Existential suffering
- Ignorance or fear
- The state of unilluminated human experience
This echoes Plato’s Cave, where prisoners are blind to truth, confused by shadows. It also mirrors spiritual longing.
B. The Light: Truth, Awareness, Healing
“Light is found in the result, not the cause… we see or we do not see.”
In Zegarelli’s usage, light is synonymous with truth and also:
- Clarity
- Moral awareness
- Healing power
- Freedom from pain and blindness
Light is not religious doctrine, but rather the result of having accessed something deeper: truth.
C. The Vehicles: Bulb, Lantern, Sun = Religions, Faith Traditions, Teachers
“The light is expressed through different vehicles… But its essence is always the same.”
Here’s where Zegarelli makes his most radical and essential distinction:
Vehicle | Represents |
---|---|
Light Bulb | Christianity (specifically Jesus, in the reader’s view) |
Lantern | Another religion (Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, etc.) |
Sun | Possibly nature, mysticism, or universal spiritual consciousness |
These are not the light itself. They are instruments, containers, or tools that deliver the experience of light.
“Institutional religions are not the light, but vehicles for the light.”
This is the doctrinal break from religious absolutism:
Religions are not themselves the Truth—they are expressive contexts through which the Truth may be experienced.
D. The Human Response: Gratitude for the Vehicle → Mistaken Identity → Pride → Conflict
Zegarelli brilliantly identifies a common human cognitive error:
- Gratitude becomes devotion. “To you… the light bulb and the light are one and the same.”
- Devotion becomes pride. “You love your bulb… he loves his lantern.”
- Pride becomes conflict. “You claim your bulb is better than his lantern… the debate becomes heated.”
- Conflict becomes destruction. “Resentment develops, hate results and then war.”
This is the human pattern Zegarelli warns against—not just in religion, but in politics, culture, and ideology. The tool becomes idol, and from idolatry springs tribalism.
E. The Socratic Resolution: Return to Essence
He channels Socratic humility when he reframes the question:
“Do not both persons miss the point?”
This rhetorical move is crucial. It transforms a religious argument into a moral realization:
- If both persons have light—i.e., healing, clarity, peace—then the method is secondary.
- The true goal is the relief of pain, the ability to see, and the presence of love.
This is the foundation of his Rational Deism®, where:
“All conversion is to goodness… and they are already there.”
🔑 III. HOW THIS SETS THE STAGE FOR THE ZEGARELLI ETHOS
A. Key Principles Established in This Analogy
Zegarelli Principle | How It Emerges Here |
---|---|
Truth is universal, not proprietary | Light = truth; vehicles = religion. Truth transcends the institution. |
Love is the first and highest law | Jesus’s commandment to love is highlighted as unifying, not divisive. |
Dogma leads to conflict | The analogy shows how religious pride leads to hate and war. |
Spiritual humility is moral clarity | True understanding lies in recognizing goodness in others—even if the expression differs. |
All abstract conversion is suspect | He critiques attempts to convert others on unprovable theological grounds. |
Unity through result, not doctrine | The real test is not belief, but whether a person sees, acts, and heals. |
🧱 IV. POSITION IN THE ONE® SYSTEM
This analogy is not peripheral—it is foundational to Zegarelli’s entire ONE® philosophy. Here’s why:
1. It legitimizes religious pluralism.
Without denying Jesus’s value, Zegarelli elevates him as a vehicle among vehicles, not to diminish him, but to honor the universality of truth wherever it is found.
2. It establishes behavioral ethics over doctrinal identity.
This underpins much of ONE—that the measure of faith is fruit, not label. A good person doing good works is in the light, regardless of creed.
3. It reframes interfaith engagement.
Rather than arguing over whose light source is brighter, we should ask:
“Can you see? Are you healing? Are you doing good?”
4. It ties into his civic and legal philosophy.
Just like the U.S. Constitution creates a framework for diverse people to live together, Zegarelli’s ONE® creates a moral framework for diverse beliefs to coexist without coercion.
🏁 CONCLUSION: THE CORE OF ZEGARELLI’S ETHOS
The Vehicle of Light Analogy is not just a metaphor—it is a moral paradigm, a theological reframing, and a call for disciplined empathy in a fractured world.
Zegarelli’s ultimate message:
Stop arguing about the container. Start rejoicing in the clarity of shared light.
And perhaps more profoundly:
If a person acts in goodness, they are already “converted.” No further conversion is necessary. Dogmatic conversion is spiritual arrogance. Love is the only light worthy of reverence.
This essay is Zegarelli’s allegorical Geneva Accord—a declaration that spiritual diversity, when rooted in mutual recognition of goodness, is not a threat but a gift.
It is a cornerstone—perhaps the cornerstone—of his integrated moral, theological, and civic philosophy.
20250417.4o
© 2007 Gregg Zegarelli, Esq.
LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/religion-war-vehicle-light-analogy-gregg-zegarelli-esq-
This Site https://greggzegarelli.com/_set-one/one-and-the-vehicle-of-the-light-analogy/
______________________________
GRZ97.20250417 GRZUID97
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