‘Loving thy neighbor’-hood
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A house of worship, like any institution, has the right to grow and
extend itself physically. It also bears the obligation to demonstrate
sensitivity and concern for community responses. Above all, it enjoys
the opportunity to model exemplary behavior in fulfilling the
Biblical mandate to “love your neighbor as yourself.”
Communities often struggle with neighboring religious facilities,
especially in residential areas. It was simpler when religious
buildings were solely “houses of worship,” where congregants met but
several times a week for prayer and study. They are no longer
occupied primarily on the Sabbath, but often operate 24 hours a day
and seven days a week.
Religious sites offer a wide variety of programming, meetings, and
activities, many of them secular in form and content. Often,
nontraditional offerings are featured as part of the marketing of
God’s house. Traffic, lighting, view obstruction and noise are among
the foremost issues that have aroused concern in the
“Wal-Martization” of religious facilities. Those who raise objections
are frequently branded as “prejudiced,” and their legitimate concerns
brushed aside as “anti-religious discrimination.” As Marci Hamilton
wrote in a piece called “Struggling with churches as neighbors”:
“When neighbors express their legitimate concern that their property
value will be negatively affected by the introduction of a large
building and parking lot into their neighborhood, they are subjected
to charges of being more concerned with “mammon” than mission, as
though their property rights must take a backseat to the church’s
religious agenda.”
Congress in 2000 enacted the Religious Land Use and
Institutionalized Persons Act to prevent cities from using zoning
laws to keep out religious institutions. It grants religious
institutions the right to disregard local land-use limitations unless
there is a “compelling governmental interest” to stop them from
building what they want.
Of course, the compelling interest should not be governmental, but
religious. Not everything that is possible is permissible, not
everything should be done simply because one can do it.
Self-restraint is a high religious ideal and respecting limits is a
topic frequently spoken of in the pulpit.
This is not an issue of the free expression of religion. It is one
of land use that is proportionate to the neighborhood in which the
religious institution stands. Every religious center must conform to
the pace of the community and not upset the delicate balance with
outsized demands for parking space or intensive occupancy at all
hours.
No one, and certainly not in the name of religion, has the right
to disrupt the peace, quiet and comfort of the surrounding
neighborhood.
A religious faith cannot preach “Love your neighbor” while in
practice causing that neighbor distress. It cannot teach “Do unto
others as you would have them do unto you” while antagonizing its
neighbors, strong-arming its way into town, and riding roughshod over
community sensibilities in the name of God. When a religious group
infringes on the values and ethos of the neighborhood, when it
bludgeons its fellow citizens in the courts, it demonstrates a
selfishness at odds with the Biblical ethic. In its zeal to expand,
it may impose its way upon an unwilling public. But at what cost?
Consensus is a cherished ideal in protecting our way of life.
Ramrodding an agenda down the throats of protesting neighbors is
hardly a religious posture. “Our way or the highway” does not fulfill
Isaiah’s counsel of “Come, let us reason together.” Faith groups must
lead the way in demonstrating respect for our fellow human beings. We
live in the land of the free, but we ought not consider ourselves
free to abuse our neighbors in the pursuit of more land.
Ultimately, “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the
world and they that dwell therein.” We are temporary tenants on God’s
land. Our every act should demonstrate the recognition that we must
abide by God’s call enshrined in Deuteronomy 19: “You shall not move
your Neighbor’s landmarks, set up by previous generations, in the
property that will be allotted to you in the land that the Lord your
God is giving you to possess.”
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
My first experience of Zen meditation was in the mountains of
Idyllwild at an artist’s studio, a crackling fire heating the room on
Saturday mornings. It is common for Zen sitting groups to meet in
someone’s living room, with perhaps five to 15 people getting
together once a week. Practitioners are encouraged to meditate at
home every day and to practice awareness in daily life, whether at
work, on the freeway, taking a walk or shopping for groceries.
Urban Zen centers in the United States tend to be small. We prefer
to expand by adding more times to meet for meditation rather than by
enlarging facilities. I confess, I am sometimes envious of the little
corner neighborhood churches built in the early 1900s. Zen is in the
early stages of growth in the U.S., and lacks some of the benefits of
the more established religious communities, such as property
ownership, local seminaries and salaried clergy. Whenever I travel, I
like to visit the local group to get a sense of how Zen in America is
developing. I was amazed to find that a sitting group now meets in
the library of my hometown in Iowa.
If facilities do need to be expanded, being in harmony with the
neighborhood, considering the use and scale of the other buildings
and streets, should guide plans. Trying to get along with the
neighbors is what world peace is all about.
THE REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
In addition to being the “one, holy, catholic and apostolic
community of the New Covenant,” the church is a human institution;
anyone can see who our visible members are by coming to take a look.
True members are to be “the Body of Christ,” or as Saint Teresa of
Avila wonderfully put it, “God’s hands and feet in this world here
and now;” only God sees who is and who is not.
The great Archbishop of Canterbury during World War II, William
Temple, said, “The church is the only human institution which exists
to serve people who are not its own members.” And the author of the
Book of Revelation (21:22) gives us the high inspiration that there
is “no temple in the New Jerusalem,” thus squelching once and for all
the tedious quip that since heaven is one endless church service,
anybody with two wits to rub together would prefer hell.
Given that the church is a here-and-now human institution composed
of people who are mandated to serve others, it seems to me that the
key question for any particular church feeling moved to consider
expanding its facilities is: “Will this growth affect enough lives
sufficiently and positively to justify the negative effects this
expansion may have on the lives of persons in our extended
neighborhood?”
Significant deliberations over substantial periods of time must be
given to these ethical questions of “the greatest good for the
greatest number of other people” by as many church members and
neighbors as possible.
And, of course, churches should be subject to local zoning rules
and regulations as are all human institutions.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
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