Speaking, listening in faith
Later this year, a group of evangelical Christians and Muslims will
meet in Morocco in an interfaith conference. Last week, a member of
the National Clergy Council, one of the participants, sent out a
press release stating that neither he nor any of the evangelical
participants in the conference would engage in any proselytizing
during the trip. Furthermore, he said all participants would be
required to sign a covenant that they would not evangelize at any
time while in Morocco, or risk being sent home. Rev. Rob Schenck, who
sent out the release, said, “The only focus of this effort is to
build bridges of mutual respect, understanding and friendship. We do
look forward to speaking with each other openly and without reserve
about the things that are most important to us, and that includes our
respective religions and beliefs. But we will be listening as much as
we will be talking.” Should the participants be compelled to not
evangelize during the conference? Is it fair?
Each of us can participate in interfaith dialogue right here in
Orange County. It takes just one other person from a different
religious background combined with a mutual desire to ask questions
and help each other learn.
Why is discussion about religion so tense? We sense that we
sometimes have strong opinions, with turbulent emotions accompanying
them.
For example, I notice my strong disagreement and the energies
rising in my body when someone expresses the belief that women should
not be ministers or priests. What is important is what I do next, how
I deal with my opinions and feelings.
I think many people lack the skills or confidence to deal with
this kind of common experience of disagreement, and therefore find
themselves either shying away from topics which are controversial, or
digging in for a heated argument.
For a Zen practitioner, awareness of the thoughts and body
sensations arising within is the first step. But awareness of this
moment of conversation also expands to this person, looking into
their eyes and seeing their sincere efforts to live well. The
encounter does not need to be dominated by my views. There is a
bigger picture.
Is it a solution to pretend that there are not real differences in
belief or to try to gloss over them? Although there is value in
appreciating that each religious tradition offers wisdom, it’s not
likely that we are truly “neutral,” nor would that be desirable.
“From the beginning, we had in this nation a great variety of
Christian denominations that regarded each other as mistaken,” is the
frank way that Cardinal Dulles describes American religious history.
Religious leaders and public educators should provide skills and
perspectives that help us to be more effective in dealing with areas
of disagreement that inevitably come up in a diverse culture. The
Religious Diversity Faire has been a major forum in Orange County in
providing this.
Current discussions in politics about “civility” highlight the
importance of being able to disagree in a spirit of goodwill, which
is the hallmark of the liberal arts. We may have forgotten that we
can in all honesty consider our view the best one, and yet still
respect the views of others and be enriched by the exchange.
It is not true that our only choice is to either consider all
views as equal (even where they are contradictory) or be guilty of
intolerance or condescension. Having “no view,” or espousing, “all
views are OK” is not a solution.
Inter-religious dialogue typically involves parties explaining
their beliefs to one another, narrowing disagreements by finding
areas of convergence and exploring ways they can live peacefully
together. Although I traveled in Morocco many years ago, I have found
sensitivity to the laws and customs of other cultures to be important
in a variety of situations. Not evangelizing is often a matter beyond
the terms of a formal dialogue event.
In Zen, we view attachment to religious beliefs as one way of
clinging to ego, which creates suffering and blocks people from
experiencing the fullness of life.
Interfaith dialogue can help us to see this clinging and inspire
us to move beyond it.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
“I want to live in such ways that other people will say, ‘If this
is the servant, who must the master be?’” So said Pope John XXIII in
1960 echoing the wisdom of St. Francis of Assisi in the 13th century,
“Witness always; if necessary, use words!”
Good character and noble action is the heart of good evangelism.
In this crucial sense, no one can or should ever be compelled not to
engage in good evangelism anywhere. At an interfaith conference where
“the focus is to build bridges,” however, it does seem to be wise to
prohibit “using words” to evangelize, proselytizing and promoting
partisan agendas so that participants may be encouraged to meet God
in other people who are different from themselves.
For me, “meet God” means: “be enabled to live fully,” “fill our
most basic needs,” “have what we cannot do without,” “know the most
basic truths,” “find true happiness,” “get fundamental strengths” and
more. What better goals could such an interfaith conference have?
Participants should endeavor to deepen and extend interfaith
dialogue, which has been going on for centuries.
On Wednesday evenings during this Lent 2005, our parishioners are
offering a dramatic reading arranged by our assistant priest, the
Rev. Cindy Evans Voorhees, of “Nathan the Wise,” a poem in five acts
written in 1778 by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing. The three principal
characters represent the three religions, Judaism, Christianity and
Islam; the Christian Knight comes across as less Christlike than
either Sultan Saladin or Nathan, a Jerusalem Jew.
Our associate pastor, Steve Felder, has noted how Lessing, the son
of a clergyman, was attacked for portraying a Jew so positively as
this was unheard of in 18th century Germany. The main theme of
“Nathan the Wise” is that noble character and good deeds emerge from
people of diverse creeds. A second, equally important theme is that
religious tolerance should be the norm for society.
What themes could be better for dialogue between evangelical
Christians and Muslims in Morocco this May?
VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
It is not for me to advise Christians how to respond to the “Great
Commission,” as Matthew 28:20 is known. There, the Gospel records
Jesus’ command to his disciples to baptize the nations in the name of
the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. This passage has been understood as
the warrant, or license, to evangelize the world and has been
fulfilled with varying degrees of zeal.
It is in my purview only to describe the Jewish attitude toward
missionizing.
Dear Reader, if there is a knock on your door and you open it to
find visitors eager to discuss the Bible with you and desirous to
share their faith, you can be sure of one thing: your guests are
definitely not Jewish!
Judaism does not actively proselytize and seek to convince others
to accept Jewish doctrine and practice. Judaism, the founding
religion of monotheism, teaches that all people, regardless of
particular faith, merit a portion in the world to come based on their
deeds. One’s beliefs are recognized as a matter between the person
and his God. It is not for me to intrude.
In Jewish understanding, one’s creed has no bearing on acceptance
into Heaven for all eternity. The criterion is whether that faith
influences one to do good or evil.
Another factor in Judaism’s aversion to proselytizing is that
attempts to change a fellow’s religion, overtly or subtly, reveals a
basic contempt for the other. The act of missionizing seeks to
annihilate the faith presently subscribed to and to replace it with a
“superior” belief system. While the missionary views his activity as
a noble fulfillment of a Biblical mandate, I see it as spiritual
imperialism, an attempt to colonize the mind and heart with his views
and values. Shall we exalt ourselves by demeaning others? Should we
not, rather, subscribe to the idea of pluralistic equilibrium? Faith
communities should supplement each other, not try to supplant each
other!
Lurking behind every missionary overture is the conviction that
“we have the total truth; you possess virtually none.” Despite such
conceit, I believe I am every bit the candidate for “redemption” and
“salvation,” based on the convictions to which I am heir. I am quite
“fulfilled” in my own faith, thank you very much. The integrity of
Judaism is unaffected by the presence of other religions. I submit
that a healthy dose of theological humility be taken as an antidote
to religious triumphalism and spiritual arrogance that animates the
missionary.
The energy lavished on seeking to convert others to one’s faith
would be more profitably spent in examining and bettering one’s own
spiritual life.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
Morocco was once a Christian nation, with a thriving Berber
Christian population. According to Operation World, the seventh
century conquest of the land by Islamic invaders eradicated the
Berber church and it is now illegal to proselytize. So the
requirement could have been conditional for their visas to be
approved.
However, this trip is billed as a dialogue or a discussion, not as
a seminar. It is a matter of general courtesy, and intellectual
integrity, to listen to someone with whom you are having a dialogue
(“di” comes from “2”, meaning you both have to listen).
Any of us should be willing to listen to the tenets of another
faith system. How can any person be convinced of his/her faith and
not have explored the other options? It would be intellectually
dishonest for me to tell people that Jesus is the only way of
salvation if I had not explored other faiths to discover their
salvation message. Someone who cannot listen to other points of view
must have a fear of being proven wrong. It is only when we can hear
someone else that we are truly comfortable with what we believe.
That being said, I would like to hear more of the council’s
definition of “evangelism.” If you are inviting me into a dialogue
about my faith, at what point does that discussion become evangelism.
The components of my faith that make it distinct from Islam and other
religions are also the same components that sound “evangelistic.”
When you have a dialogue to understand each other, you have to be
willing to discuss the things that may convince you that it is true
or not. If this trip is about social issues or politics, then the gag
order would be appropriate, but the trip is about “speaking ...
openly and without reserve about the things that are most important
to us, and that includes our respective religions and beliefs.”
That means anyone can talk about his or her faith except the
evangelicals. That is not a dialogue and doesn’t seem fair.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.