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Guidelines
for
Interfaith Dialogue
From a brochure of the same title,
produced and distributed by the Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations,
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), 100 Witherspoon St., Louisville, KY 40202-1396.
It is Christian faith in the triune God
-- Creator of all humankind, Redeemer in Jesus Christ, revealing and renewing
Spirit -- which calls us Christians to human relationship with our many
neighbors. Such relationship includes dialogue: witnessing to our deepest
convictions and listening to those of our neighbors. It is Christian faith which
sets us free to be open to the faiths of others, to risk, to trust, and to be
vulnerable. In dialogue, conviction and openness are held in balance.
In a world in which Christians have
many neighbors, dialogue is not only an activity of meetings and conferences. It
is also a way of living out Christian faith in relationship and commitment to
those neighbors with whom Christians share towns, cities, nations, and the earth
as a whole. This in no way replaces or limits our Christian obligation to
witness, as partners enter into dialogue with their respective commitments.
Neighbors may be partners in common
social, economic, and political crises and quests; companions in intellectual
and spiritual exploration; or, literally, the people next door. In some places,
Christians and the church as an institution are in positions of power and
influence, and their neighbors are without power. In other places it is the
Christians who are powerless. There are also situations of tension and conflict
where dialogue may not be possible or opportunities very limited. In many places
people of different living faiths interact not only with each other but also
with people of various ideologies. The emergence of new religious groups has
brought new dimensions and tensions to interreligious relationships.
- Churches should seek ways in
which Christian communities can enter into dialogue with their neighbors
of different faiths and ideologies. They should also discover ways of
responding to similar initiatives by their neighbors.
- Dialogues should normally be
planned together. They may well focus on particular issues: theological
or religious, political or social.
- Partners in dialogue should take
stock of the religious, cultural and ideological diversity of their local
situations. Only by being alert both to the particular areas of tension
and discrimination and to the particular opportunities for conversation and
cooperation in their own context will Christians and their neighbors be able
to create the conditions for dialogue. They should be especially alert to
infringements of the basic human rights of religious, cultural, or
ideological minority groups.
- Partners in dialogue should be
free to define themselves. One of the functions of dialogue is to allow
participants to describe and witness to their faith in their own terms.
Self-serving descriptions of other people's faith are one of the roots of
prejudice, stereotyping, and condescension. It should be recognized by
partners in dialogue that any religion or ideology claiming universality
will also have its own interpretations of other religions and ideologies as
part of its own self-understanding. Dialogue gives an opportunity for a
mutual questioning of the understandings partners have about themselves and
others.
- Dialogue should generate
educational efforts in the community. In many cases Christians must take
the initiative in education in order to restore the distorted image of
neighbors that may already exist in their communities. Even where Christians
do not live in close contact with people of various religious traditions,
they should take seriously the responsibility to learn.
- Dialogue is most vital when its
participants actually share their lives together. Where people of
different faiths share common activities, intellectual interests, and
spiritual quests, dialogue can be related to the whole of life and can
become a style of living-in-relationship. The person who asks a neighbor of
another faith to explain the meaning of a custom or festival has actually
taken the first step in dialogue. Of course, dialogue between long-term
neighbors may be frustrated by deeply ingrained suspicions, and men and
women will have to reckon with the barriers between their present
communities.
- Dialogue should be pursued by
sharing in common enterprises in community. In the search for a just
community of humankind, Christians and their neighbors will be able to help
each other break out of cultural, educational, political, and social
isolation in order to realize a more participatory society. It may well be
that such common enterprises will generate interreligious committees.
- Partners in dialogue should be
aware of their ideological commitments. Dialogue may begin as a kind of
"internal dialogue," seeking to bring to explicit reflection and
discussion issues in the encounter of the gospel with the ideological
factors in various communities where Christians find themselves and with the
ideological assumptions of Christians themselves.
- Partners in dialogue should be
aware of cultural loyalties. Dialogue and sensitivity to neighbors need
to be developed in the area of relating Christian faith to cultures. A
culture should not be romanticized nor made into a false absolute but it may
often challenge and enrich the expression of the Christian faith.
- Dialogues will raise the question
of sharing in celebrations, rituals, worship, and meditation. Human
communities draw together, express, and renew themselves in ritual and
worship. Dialogue presumes an attitude of respect for the ritual expressions
of the neighbors' community. Dialogue, at times, includes extending and
accepting invitations to visit each other as guests and observers in family
and community rituals, ceremonies, and festivals. Working together in common
activities or visiting homes and festivals will eventually raise the very
difficult and important question of fuller sharing in common prayer,
worship, or meditation. Whether or not any such activities are undertaken,
dialogue partners will want to face squarely the issues raised, sensitive to
one another's integrity and fully realizing the assumptions and implications
of what is done or not done.
- Dialogue should be planned and
undertaken ecumenically whenever possible. Churches should move forward
in planning for dialogue in cooperation with one another.
Abridged from the World Council of
Churches, Guidelines on Dialogue with People of Living Faiths and Ideologies,
used with permission.
Resources
Ariarajah, Wesley. The Bible and
People of Other Faiths. Orbis, 1989. ISBN 2-8254-0840-9.
Bibliographies on interfaith relations.
Office of Interfaith Relations, National Council of Churches, 475 Riverside Dr.,
New York NY 10017.
Confessing Christian Faith in a
Pluralistic Society. Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research,
Collegeville Mn., 1995.
"Confessing Christ Today" educational
video, available from Presbyterian resource centers, with study guide
Corless, Roger J. and Lynn de Silva. Christians
Learning About Buddhist Neighbors. Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Office of
Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations. Occasional Paper #6, 1992. PDS#243-92-025.
World Council of Churches. Mission
and Evangelism: An Ecumenical Affirmation. 1982. Order copy from Office of
Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations.
World Council of Churches. My
Neighbour's Faith -- and Mine. Geneva, 1986. Order from WCC Distribution
Center, P.O. Box 326, Kutztown, PA 19530.
"The Church of Jesus Christ is
the provisional demonstration of what God intends for all of humanity."
"True witness follows Jesus
Christ in respecting and affirming the uniqueness and freedom of others."
"The Spirit of God is
constantly at work in ways that pass human understanding and in places that to
us are least expected. In entering into a relationship of dialogue with others,
therefore, Christians seek to discern the unsearchable riches of God and the way
[God] deals with humanity."
"Witness cannot be a one-way
process, but of necessity is two-way; in it Christians become aware of some of
the deepest convictions of their neighbors. It is also the time in which, within
a spirit of openness and trust, Christians are able to bear authentic witness,
giving an account of their commitment to the Christ, who calls all persons to
himself."
Mission and Evangelism:
An Ecumenical Affirmation
Information was provided by the PC(USA) Ecumenical
and Interfaith Office, and has been reprinted with permission.
For additional information, please go to www.pcusa.org/wmd/eir.
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