Spreading the word in opposing territory
A story tells of a Catholic and an Episcopalian who were discussing
the ways of God. They could not reach a definitive conclusion and the
Catholic said to the Episcopalian, “Well, we will just have to
continue to disagree about the ways of God -- you in your way and I
in his.”
Underlying this seemingly benign conclusion is an expression of
religious triumphalism.
While missionaries see their activities as noble efforts to open
the blind eye, they are engaged acts of disrespect. The missionary
says that the beliefs and practices of other faiths do not provide a
meaningful way of life and path to salvation. Unless a person accepts
the conviction of the missionary, his eternal soul is doomed.
Missionizing is an effort to win another person’s acknowledgment of
the error of his ways and recognize a higher, self-evident truth. The
goal of this thoughtlessly directed religious zeal is the
annihilation of a person’s present faith and the demolishing of
another religious culture. To claim that another faith lies outside
the consummation of God’s covenant is an act of spiritual
imperialism. It reduces the person who is the object of the
missionary’s assault to a theological category.
To say, for example, that my religion cannot possibly be
fulfilling, that I cannot find union with God in commitment to my
faith, that I am blind to another religion’s exclusive claim to
truth, that my historic role has been abrogated, are implications to
be resented and resisted. To the missionary, only his faith is
legitimate. But each faith insists on its own validity and integrity.
My faith was not merely a prelude to another faith and my Scripture
is not a pale forerunner of a fuller revelation.
Lurking behind every missionary statement is the belief that we
have the complete truth and you have virtually none, that you are
out-of-date, obsolete and second level. No matter how the missionary
coats his efforts with high-minded justifications and approaches with
superficial kindness, his position is one of attack. Rather than
arrogantly seek to colonize my mind, heart and spirit with his faith
and supplant my belief with his, the would-be missionary would do
well to perfect his own spiritual being, a full-time proposition for
anyone.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
“Agree to disagree” doesn’t mean you shut your brain off.
I have studied in depth every major religious system and many of
the minor ones. I own and have read most of their holy books. I did
not grow up in a Christian home; I grew up neutral, leaning toward
Eastern mysticism and new age. My journeys led me to Jesus. These
explorations gave me a strength and confidence in my new beliefs.
During the Soviet era, I was in Eastern Europe and ministering
covertly. The KGB had been pursuing us. During one conversation in a
small village, a woman said, “My government tells me that the U.S. is
a fairy tale. But you are here. Maybe what they say about
Christianity is false as well.”
The Soviet fear of Christianity caused people to be more curious
about it. It is the draw of the forbidden. I have invited Muslims,
Jews, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons and more to speak with our
congregation, so that our students get real information about these
traditions and become convinced of their choice. I have so much
confidence in the doctrines of our faith that I don’t fear needing to
censor information to our people.
On the other hand, I would be racist (or worse) if I limited those
to whom I talk to, reach out to or offer services, based on their
ethnicity, race, economic status, gender or sexual orientation. What
would we think of a doctor who limited his remedies to certain groups
of people?
The strength and uniqueness of the American democratic experiment
is that we have always been able to discuss faith and religion freely
between members of our society. We are not Saudi Arabia, which is one
of many countries where it is illegal to change your faith.
There is no love without choice and God created us to love him. To
love him, we must have the choice to walk away from him. That is what
makes the relationship so beautiful -- it is by choice.
Judaism is unique in that the religion and the race have common
roots. You can be born ethnically a Jew, you can choose to practice
Judaism or some can do both. Jewish prophets like Hosea, Micah and
Amos all lamented that God wanted people’s hearts and not their
sacrifices.
Christianity began as a revival in Judaism. The call of Jesus was
to abandon belief in sacrifices as a relationship builder with God
and go back to the faith of Abraham. Abraham’s relationship with God
was based on his faith in God, not on circumcision or any sacrifice.
All that came later.
Early Christ followers were all Jews and considered themselves
Jews. They worshiped in the Temple, went to synagogue and called
Jesus their Rabbi. To this day, we regularly celebrate rites linked
to our ancient Jewish roots. Our two most important rites, baptism
and communion, come from Jewish rites.
With this in mind, Avodat Yisrael is not asking people to leave
Judaism, nor to stop being Jewish. The goal is that in their Judaism
they would learn from their Father Abraham and find the faith with
which he became the “Father of many nations.”
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
When the Council of Christians and Jews, which had succeeded a
Council of (Christian) Churches, became obsolete in the early 1970s,
I wrote this statement of purpose for the just-then-forming Berkeley
Area Interfaith Council: “The surest liberation from idolatrous
religion is to have to meet God in people who are very different from
ourselves.”
I defined “idolatrous” as worshiping -- trusting wholly in -- what
is not God, less than God, and suggested substituting “ingrown,”
“private,” “nationalistic,” “culture-centric” or “ethno-centric,”
etc. I said that for me, “meet God” means “fill our most basic
needs,” “have what we cannot do without,” “be enabled to live fully,”
“know the most basic truths,” “find true happiness,” “get fundamental
strengths” and the like. I still have business card-sized giveaways
with all this on them!
There is a very old and, I trust, fictional story about a
parishioner in a very well established Episcopal congregation asking
the priest, “Is it possible for a man to achieve salvation outside
the fold of the Episcopal Church?”
After interior combat, the pastor answered, “Yes, there might be
such a possibility, but no gentleman would avail himself of it.”
A contemporary cartoon conveys a similar message by having one
well-dressed Episcopalian say to another, “Everyone in this town who
should be an Episcopalian already is one.”
If such humor is at all close to truth for any of us, surely we
all will benefit measurably from regularly meeting God in people who
are very different from ourselves!
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Protecting the vitality of the congregation is always a concern of
any religious organization. There are spoken and unspoken
expectations between churches concerning the solicitation of each
other’s congregants, with sometimes differing ideas about the extent
to which community outreach and advertising is appropriate.
The Zen tradition of “ask three times” suggests that solicitation
and advertisement should be minimal. Unless a person has enough drive
to “ask three times” for permission to enter a training center, their
chances of learning how to meditate and pursuing a Zen practice are
not very good, therefore they shouldn’t be encouraged.
At our center, we treat all those who come to an introductory
workshop as adults fully capable of judging for themselves whether
pursuing more classes or training might be worthwhile to them. In
this spirit, we have only a small sign on our building and our
regular practitioners soon learn that talking about Zen has limited
value. Zen awareness practice is best shared by people trying their
best to live with care and attention to whatever is present, rather
than expounding principles.
The Zen school doesn’t hold beliefs, even religious ideas, in very
high regard. Bodhidharma, the Indian prince living in 500 C.E., and
the founder of Zen in China, stated there should be “no reliance on
words and letters.”
Zen is founded on meditation and action, not beliefs
(interpretations). So there shouldn’t be any antagonism toward other
groups holding differing beliefs. All beliefs are suspect, whether
they be Christian, Jewish, or Zen if, in relying on beliefs, we are
not experiencing our lives directly.
As one of the old Zen teachers said, “It’s like tasting water --
we know for ourselves whether it is cool or warm.”
Living our lives in awareness is not a complicated affair that
requires religious canon. As Zen practitioners, we respect the
ability of each person to direct their spiritual or religious path in
order to taste and drink deeply of their life. It’s disingenuous to
interfere with that process beyond a simple sign on the door.
REV. CAROL AGUILAR
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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