Mistaking religious identities
“Navel-gazing.” “Go with the flow.” “Blissed out.” “New age.”
The phrase “Zen-like” has become common-
place in advertising and popular journalism. The vow to
compassionate action, which is at the heart of Zen, and the
discipline and steadfastness involved in this spiritual path are
often overlooked.
Another misconception is that all Buddhists are alike. Many people
do not know that Buddhism has branches and denominations and as much
variety as Christianity. A Southern Baptist from Georgia, Coptic
Christian in Cairo, Roman Catholic from Spain and member of Crystal
Cathedral will all express their interpretations of Christianity
quite differently. A Buddhist monk at the Jade Temple in Shanghai, a
Theravadan practitioner in the caves of Thailand, a Tibetan monk, a
Pure Land Buddhist in Japan and a Zen practitioner in Orange County
will not see their Buddhist practice the same way. To give one
example, in Zen, we do not worship the Buddha or call on him to
intervene in our lives. We regard him as an awakened person, an
example and guide in our own attempts to be aware.
At the Zen Center, we choose not to wear clothes that stand out or
to call attention to ourselves because we don’t feel this is
especially helpful or meaningful. In similar fashion, the majority of
Roman Catholic sisters in the ‘60s replaced their religious habits
(and veils), derived from the lay clothing of medieval Europe, with
the ordinary clothes of our day and culture. This was a part of a
much more important shift in awareness: that the sacred is found
within daily life, rather than in some otherworld or foregone time.
Many of the sisters I know felt that these clothes implied that they
wanted special treatment, that they were perhaps superior to others,
and that it did little to promote Christian values (despite contrary
views that distinctive dress provides an important “witness”).
In Buddhism, the robe and kesa (cloth worn over one shoulder) are
the distinguishing garb worn around the world. Sometimes the shoulder
is bare (for example, in Tibet) and sometimes it is not (in Japan).
We prefer that Zen practitioners quietly live their practice without
calling attention to themselves by apparel or extraneous signs.
THE REV.
DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of
Orange County
Costa Mesa
I’m not a Christian, I am a Christ-follower! The difference is in
the generalization that comes with the former. I am not what many
people think a “Christian” is. The societal definition has more to do
with religion, legalism, self-righteous attitudes and leaving your
brain checked at the front door. As a Christ-follower (the original
meaning of “Christian”), my main goal is to be like Jesus. He was a
humble, pious, intelligent, courageous servant of humanity. I fail,
but I keep trying. I want to commune with the divine, not try to
placate him with some accomplished list of religious regulations.
People misunderstand the difference. They often categorize
everyone who goes to church in the same light as Ned from “The
Simpsons” (I’ve never said “okily-dokily”) or other examples they
have gotten from the media. We have been petitioning Hollywood for
years to give us a break. It’s easier to just use another name than
to change Hollywood, though.
In the end, no argument or advertising campaign will change the
public perception. As an individual, my best response is to live a
life in front of them that challenges their misconceptions. That kind
of a life always starts conversations. In the meantime, I am just
following Jesus.
ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
The home plate umpire at a doubleheader was criticized
unmercifully during the first game. Over and over again, the fans
cast aspersions on the quality of his eyesight, booing nearly all of
his calls. As the second game was about to begin, the umpire was not
to be found at his place behind the catcher, but he was soon
discovered sitting in the stands next to his detractors.
When they asked him if he was going to umpire the game, he
responded, “Yes, but obviously I will be able to see it better from
here.”
We all think we can judge just fine from a distance. But
perceptions from afar are not only superficial, they are most often
wrong.
Charles Lamb once said, “Don’t introduce me to that man. I want to
go on hating him, and I cannot hate a man whom I know.”
People and groups are judged from afar by members of other groups.
Those judgments are at times less than salutary and employ shortcut
characterizations that vilify and condemn. We are often too
intellectually lazy to deal with reality in its subtlety, variety,
permutations, and combinations. We prefer the comfort of a dismissive
adjective with which we lump people into a mass that conforms with
our preconceived notions. We tend to prefer our image of the truth to
reality itself.
The Jewish tradition asks why God created Adam alone. Why didn’t
he fashion all of humankind in a multitude as we know it? It answers
that God created a solitary being so that we realize the significance
and preciousness and uniqueness of each individual. Every individual
is a world with layers upon layers of breadth and depth, strength and
weakness, talents and aversions, all with varying degrees of mildness
or intensity, all with mind-boggling complexity and diversity. We do
others a disservice and shortchange ourselves when we ignore this and
label from afar. We have all been pleasantly gratified when we came
to know someone about whom we previously thought one thing, only to
find our initial judgment was wrong.
It is one thing to sit in the stands and impose our angle of
vision on the ball, and quite another to be in close proximity to the
action on the field. Indeed, it makes all the difference between what
is fair and what is foul.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
Since I am an imam and dress accordingly, I often get second
looks, and at times people will approach me to ask questions about my
religion. I enjoy it when people inquire about my faith because it
becomes a great opportunity to speak on my faith, and often times
clear up any misconceptions. Since the public has become more aware
of Muslims and their religious leader, people often recognize that I
am a Muslim cleric. On the other hand, Muslim women tell me that they
are often mistaken as nuns, and are often asked what denomination.
Their response is met with a smile and clarity.
IMAM MOUSTAFA
AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
In 32 years of wearing an “outfit” standard for Episcopal clergy,
people who would not have responded to me at all if I were not
dressed as a clergyperson have spit and snarled at me, shaken fists
and given me their one-finger salute; many more folks I don’t know
who, I’m sure, would not have done so if I were not clerically
outfitted, have smiled, nodded and wished me well.
We all make mistakes by “judging books by their covers” and
misconceptions of who priests (and, I am confident, who rabbis,
imams, Sikhs) are, are multitudinous! I try to deal with this by not
taking it personally, by realizing that these folks are not
responding to Peter Haynes, but to their prejudices and
predispositions toward religion, religious communities and their
leaders. Humor helps!
When I became Episcopal chaplain at UC Berkeley, I donned my
clerical outfit, carried a Bible in one hand, a book of common prayer
in the other, and made myself visible to university folks. I waited
for students and professors to sit beside me and engage in life’s
great questions about God and Jesus, birth and death, evil and joy. A
few visitors on the campus did stop to ask directions, others spit
and snarled or smiled and waved.
One day, a very Bezerkeleyesque fellow got “in my face,” tapped on
my round, white, clerical collar and asked, “Hey, man, are you
religious?”
Immediately, I changed my approach to ministry as Cal Chaplain.
Of course, “do not discriminate” is the best response to this
question, but “don’t judge books by their covers” also applies. And,
good humor helps.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
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