Welcome to David Mundy's nearly-daily blog. David retired after 37 years as a United Church minister (2017)and has kept a journal for more than 39 years. This blog is more public but contains his personal musings and reflections on the world, through the lens of his Christian faith. Follow his Creation Blog, Groundling (groundlingearthyheavenly.blogspot.ca) and Mini Me blog (aka Twitter) @lionlambstp
Thursday, August 07, 2014
For the Common Good in a Time of Suspicion
Brian Zahnd is a thoughtful evangelical writer who has written worthwhile books on peacemaking as the way of Christ (Farewell to Mars) and the core value of radical forgiveness in our Christian faith (Unconditional?) I follow him on Twitter and often retweet his messages in 140 characters. Recently he tweeted a link to a statement he drafted a few years ago with Ahmed El-Sherif, an Arab Muslim scientist, and Samuel Nachum, an Israeli Jewish artist. It is a declaration of peaceful, respectiful co-existence. I thought it was excellent and timely, so I share it with you.
For the Common Good
We are Jews, Christians and Muslims.
And we are friends.
We seek to follow our respective religions faithfully.
We do not believe all religions are the same.
We recognize the reality of our religious differences.
But we are friends.
We are devout in our faith and respectful of our friendship.
Our faith and friendship need not be mutually exclusive.
We recognize that we share common space — the common space of a shared planet.
For the sake of the common good we seek common ground.
We do not share a common faith, but we share a common humanity.
In our different religions we do not practice the same rituals or pray the same prayers.
But in our shared humanity we hold to a common dream: Shalom, Salaam, Peace.
We hold to the dream that our children may play in peace without fear of violence.
And so…
We pledge not to hate.
We pledge not to dehumanize others.
We pledge to do no harm in the name of God.
As individuals we do not compromise the truth claims of our respective religions—
But we will not use truth claims to fuel hate or justify violence.
We will practice our respective faiths: Judaism, Christianity, Islam.
But we believe our faith can be practiced in the way of peace—
We believe our faith truly practiced need never be at odds with humanitarian ideals.
Our religions share a complex and intertwined history—
A history of interaction that has too often been tumultuous and bloody.
We believe there must be a better way and we seek that better way.
The way of peace.
We are Jews, Christians and Muslims.
And we are friends.
We seek common ground for the common good.
Shalom, Salaam, Peace.
Ahmed El-Sherif, Samuel Nachum, Brian Zahnd
I should note that I admire Zahnd for his expansive and deeply gospel-rooted Christianity, but there are some evangelicals who consider him a heretic -- which makes me like him even more!
Does this statement work for you? Does it capture your hope for respectful co-existence between religions and their followers? Do you know people from other religions and have you engaged in meaningful conversation?
Are you a fan of fireflies? Read my Groundling blog today http://groundlingearthyheavenly.blogspot.ca/2014/08/this-little-light-of-mine.html
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2 comments:
I love that declaration. If only everyone would read it and live by it!
I have known people from many religions, and it never is an issue for me. Hey, nobody can prove that THEIR beliefs are right and everybody else's is wrong, so people need to climb off their high horse and be tolerant and accepting.
I believe what I believe. Whether I'm right or not, I'll never know.
I too think this is a good and worthwhile declaration.
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