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On Monday, 10
June, 2002, the Queen chose to celebrate the diversity of the UK’s
different faiths by inviting eight hundred guests from what the BBC
referred to as ‘Britain's nine historic faiths – the Baha'i, Buddhist,
Christian, Hindu, Jain, Jewish, Muslim, Sikh and Zoroastrian traditions’
to a reception ‘as a signal of [her] respect for all religions in
Britain, not just the Church of England, of which she is head.’
Of course, how you
approach this topic depends a lot on where you live. I’m writing this
article in a beautiful half-timbered hotel in rural Sussex. Walk down
the main street here and you won’t see many Muslims or Sikhs in
recognisable dress. Nor, indeed, will there be many folk of Asian or
African origin waiting for the bus. But come with me to north-west
London, where I live and work, and you’ll find yourself in a context
where the majority population in three of our Boroughs is non-white,
where 300 different languages are spoken, and where each of those ‘nine
historic faiths’ is well represented. One of my parishes, in Southall,
is 36% Sikh, 21% Hindu, 20% Muslim and 20% Christian. Welcome to the
most cosmopolitan place on earth!
Living in such a
context changes the way you think about the place of Christianity in our
society. From being the dominant faith that shaped the upbringing of my
generation – back in the 1960s, when school assemblies were Christian
acts of worship, Scouts went to ‘church parade’, and everyone knew the
Lord’s Prayer – Christianity now has to take its place alongside the
rest. And that’s true even in areas of the country where there aren’t
the huge numbers of devotees of the other World Faiths that we find in
London and our other major cities. What are Christians to make of this?
Let me offer you ten hints for living as followers of the Universal God
in a diverse world of faith.
1. Don’t lose the
Big Story
Just because our
experience of the context of the Christian faith is changing, it
doesn’t make Christianity any less true. At Spring Harvest this year,
our theme is the ‘Big Story’ of God as revealed in Jesus Christ and
through the pages of scripture. A key text from the Jewish scriptures,
which are also our scriptures, is the Shema “Hear, O Israel, the
Lord our God, the Lord is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4), This simple prayer,
said by devout Jews twice a day, affirms the identity of God – that
Yahweh is the one and only true God, without equal and without
competition. The prophets asserted the same truth, but universalised
their understanding of the scope of God’s salvation (read Isaiah 55-66,
for example). It’s an affirmation learned the hard way, and then owned,
by the early Church in its preaching in the early chapters of Acts. God
was not a tribal god. He wasn’t just the God of the Jews. In Jesus, he
has come to proclaim his kingdom rule over the whole earth. That’s our
Big Story, in the face of all other truth claims, and it’s why we can
speak of a Universal God.
2. Understand the
difference between diversity and pluralism
One of the
slippery words that come into the picture when we talk about
Christianity’s relationship to other faiths is pluralism. It’s a word
defined in a number of ways, but tends to carry the connotation that
religious experience is diverse (true); that there is a multiplicity of
great world religions (also true); and that no religion can claim to
have ultimate truth, because it would be wrong to privilege one
expression of faith above others. And that’s where I’d want to take
issue. Jesus’ own claim to be the way, the truth and the life, and the
apostles’ preaching in the face of Greek religions, together with the
stance the Church has taken throughout the centuries, point to a
Christian stance that embraces gladly the diversity of culture and faith
but insists that faith in Jesus Christ brooks no rivals.
3. Be aware of the
different approaches Christians take
Not all Christians
would agree with this stance. There are Christian pluralists around.
John Hick, a Presbyterian theologian, has argued that “the great world
faiths embody different perceptions and conceptions of… the Real.”
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He’s doesn’t want Christians to give up their allegiance, but wants to
give weight to the truth claims of other religions. Thus he comes to
argue that God has revealed himself in a multiplicity of ways. Where
Hick’s argument really comes unstuck (and it’s a pretty complex
argument) is around the doctrine of the incarnation. If God really did
become a human being in Jesus Christ, as Christians believe he did, then
that makes the Christian understanding unique, and pluralism very hard
to sustain.
Two other words
that are bandied around in the debate about Christianity and other
faiths are
· particularism –
the traditional view that the Bible is God’s unique word which sets it
apart from other scriptures, and that the incarnation and the story of
God’s grace in Jesus make Christianity’s truth claims absolute. That
doesn’t mean that particularists see nothing of value in other faiths,
nor that Christians can’t learn anything from those faiths.
· inclusivism –
another word with a confusing number of meanings. For some inclusivist
Christians, people who follow other world faiths can be saved without
knowing it (“anonymous Christians”, in the phrase of Karl Rahner, the
Catholic theologian). Others use the word “inclusive” as a way of
indicating that people in other faiths may in God’s purposes be drawn to
faith in Jesus because God reveals himself within those religions.
What’s most
important in all this debate among Christians is the need to respect and
understand what other faiths teach and what our Hindu and Muslim
neighbours believe – and where those beliefs are similar to, or differ
from, the Christian revelation.
4. When they show Jesus the red card, cry foul!
Every Christmas,
there’ll be stories about how some petty bureaucrat has decreed that we
have to say “Happy holidays” for fear of offending Muslims, or that
we’re going to rename it ‘Winterva’, or that there can’t be a nativity
play because the Jews wouldn’t like it. Such reports usually come from
the nasty end of the tabloid press, so check their veracity. But such
things do happen, usually because some well-meaning non-religious person
thinks that overt Christian celebrations and observances are
offensive to the minority faiths in this country. Nothing could be
further from the truth. Muslims, Jews and Hindus are glad that there are
people of true faith among the many nominal Christians of the UK. They
want us to be authentically Christian. In Ealing, we march
through the streets in acts of Christian witness, and are applauded by
our Sikh neighbours, who themselves do a pretty good line in parades!
We mustn’t allow
Jesus to be given the red card, sent off from the public arena on the
grounds that “you can follow all of the faiths (or none), but whatever
you do, you can’t be publicly Christian.”
5. Beware
fundamentalism – whatever form it takes
The difficult and
potent ingredient in the faith mix in the UK at present is
fundamentalism. The London attacks last July were carried out by
misguided followers of Islam who had so distorted the teachings of that
faith that they believed they were martyrs. As Christians, we need to be
aware that there are those who claim the name of Christ but believe that
followers of the other world faiths are so evil and deluded that they
should be opposed by whatever means possible. Contemporary
fundamentalism (which is there in most belief systems) is an easy and
comfortable position that sees the rest of the world as its enemy and
ends up demonising our neighbour for whom Christ died.
6. Learn wisdom
from the world Church
One of the
greatest joys of living in NW London is that many of the folk from
different ethnic and cultural backgrounds in my locality are Christians
– Nigerians, Sri Lankans, first and second generation Caribbeans. Many
of them, particularly in Africa and Asia, have first-hand experience of
living alongside Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs in a different cultural
context. Talking to them about how they coped with a majority Muslim
population, or from a place where Christians are persecuted, can be
salutary in being real about the challenges we face now and in the
future. They can also help us with our witness to our other faith
friends.
7. Expect God to
be at work in other religions
Baptising people
who’ve come to faith from Islam is an awesome privilege. Hearing their
stories – of the cost to them, of their ostracism by their family, and
sometimes of the martyrdom of their brother or sister – is
heart-rending. But an interesting common thread is their perception that
Jesus was calling them in the midst of their adherence to Islam; that he
wasn’t without his witnesses in the midst of another religion. The same
can be said for Messianic Jews, converted Hindus, and so many others.
8. Be open to
dialogue
Which of course is
why dialogue is so important: meeting my neighbour in respect and
mutuality, and allowing them to share their faith with me as I with
them. Working with those of other faith for the good of our
communities, but not falling into the Government trap of treating
‘faith’ as a portmanteau word for everyone. Dialogue and co-operation
doesn’t mean setting aside our distinctiveness. But it will change you,
as you get to know the other faiths as people, and not just as an
entity. It will also mean encounter and visit.
10. Know your
boundaries
When I visit a
Sikh gurdwara, I need to know something about what’s expected of
me (covering my head and taking off my shoes), and what I might or might
not be prepared to do. Sikhs place their holy book at the centre of the
temple, and reverence the book as guru by kneeling before it. As a
Christian, I don’t feel I can do that, but I mark respect for the book
by making a slight bow. You’re also offered holy food at the gurdwara.
Do you take and eat it, knowing it’s part of Sikh worship, or do you
decline it and perhaps cause offence. What might Christians from a
Sikh/Punjabi background have to say to you? Does 1 Corinthians 8 help
you in how you decide what you do? In a multi-faith society, we (and our
children on school visits to places of worship) face these sorts of
questions all the time.
Don’t be afraid to
share Jesus, sensitively and humbly
Of course, because
we believe that Jesus is the only way to God, we want to tell others
about him. Living in this changed and changing context might well make
us feel that we can’t talk about him to our Hindu neighbour. But that
didn’t stop the first Christians. Paul in Athens (Acts 17) engaged with
the other religions that were around. He dialogued with them. He
discussed with them. He engaged with their literature and culture. And
on that basis he is able to share the message of Jesus. If we serve and
follow the universal God, we shall want his name to be known in all the
world of faiths.
Pete Broadbent is
the Bishop of Willesden, London and a member of the Spring Harvest
leadership Team.
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