The
murder of 6 Sikhs gathered for worship in Wisconsin on Sunday was followed
today by an arsonist torching a mosque in Joplin, Missouri. This comes just a
few months after a man threw a Molotov cocktail into a Queens, New York mosque
while worshipers were at prayer – and burning one Muslim owned business and two
Muslim owned homes on the same night.
It
should be sufficient for Christians to remember that we follow the victim of
religious violence, not a perpetrator of it. But if that is not enough, the history
of religious intolerance in the Western World, the crimes that have been
committed in our name, mean that Christians have a special moral duty to stand
against violence of any kind but especially violence against faith communities.
That is our calling, but when one of our priests announced that she would be
attending a 9-11 reconciliation service at an Islamic Center last year, members
of the congregation walked out.
It
is not enough for Episcopalians to look at hate crimes committed by “those
people” against ‘those other people” and say, “tsk, tsk.” In the face of
growing bigotry and violence, sometimes accompanied by ignorance that cannot
tell a Sikh from a Muslim, we have a duty to act in the following ways:
First
we must educate our own people. We need to know the truth about the world
religions. There are plenty of good texts to use, starting with the Huston
Smith classic, World Religions, and more recent books like Bowker’s World
Religions: The Great Faiths Explored And Explained or Brodd’s World Religions:
A Voyage Of Discovery. Or use a video such as Beyond Our Differences or Pillars
of Faith. (You can buy it from Amazon and watch it with a group from a
different religion).
But
Christians need to do more than know what other religions teach. We need to
know what Christianity teaches about the inconvenient truth that other people
worship the same God in other ways. For this, a good starter would be Gordon
Kaufman’s God, Mystery, Diversity. We need to know how to honor other faith
traditions not in denigration of our own beliefs but because of them.
Second
– this is really two things but the best way is to do them together -- we need
to form personal relationships with people of other faiths and join hands with
them in working for our communities and our world. Nevadans for the Common Good
(Southern Nevada) and ACTIONN (Northern Nevada) are prime examples of how we
can befriend each other while uniting for a more just and merciful world.
Third,
we must take public stands against religious intolerance. If we do not do so,
then non-violent people will turn their backs on us and rightly so.
4 comments:
Well said! We must educate ourselves. There are violent extremists in every religion, including those following Christ. Take a stand and come together as a community, just like the priest you mentioned attending a service at an Islamic center. Embrace it. Love on each-other.
Excellent! How I wish more bishops would step up and lead on contemporary issues like you do.
Great point personal freedom to say what you believe precious gift to all men.Great responsibility too as 2 of our journos have discovered by careless sharing of personal info re princess in hospital ( 8th commandment highlights its imp) Liked your absolom absolom piece .My experience in class with good news line drawings and art in the bible here "http://savedbythebell.blogspot.com"
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