As a student in India, I sometimes helped at a leprosy clinic. The other students were a Muslim from Hyderabad and a Catholic from Sri Lanka. The doctor was Hindu. Together we were helping those in need. This is what interfaith work is really about. All the meetings to overcome inherited hostility and isolation are so that together people of faith can contribute to the healing of the world. Jesus said that he came to bring life in all its fullness. Faith communities should be for the service of all, not for their self-promotion.
Interfaith work is not just theological discussions of scholars or spiritual sharing of devotees – it is very relevant both to peace and development.
If the twentieth century was shaped by the clash with atheistic ideologies such as Communism, which still lives on in North Korea, or Nazi fascism, the opening years of this century have been marked by the clash with religious extremists. The struggle today is between true religion and its misuse as an ideology. This is why interfaith dialogue is of such importance. The outrage of 9/11, the defining event, was perpetrated by men who cheered themselves on by reading - out of context – war texts from the Qur’an. Leaders of all faiths have made clear their repudiation of the use of religion to justify terrorism. A crime in the name of God is a crime against God.
Such denunciations are not enough. Alienated minorities have to be helped to see that their extremist interpretation of scripture is wrong. This, of course, has to be the task of members of the particular religion – and it is good that Muslims are now making big efforts to do this and to play a full part in the interfaith movement. Yet they deserve support from people of other faiths, who need to make a wider public aware that the extremism that is highlighted by the media is not the true face of a religion. Otherwise, all the members of that faith feel targeted and their sense of being marginalized, economically and politically, is exploited by extremists. Whatever our own beliefs, we have a responsibility to resist Islamaphobia or anti-Semitism or the persecution of Christians.
Interfaith understanding is also vital within a society. Most European countries are now multi-racial and multi-faith, and in many Muslim countries there are deep divisions between Sunnis and Shi’ites. Religion is part of a person’s sense of identity – what they wear, what they eat, as well as what they believe. It is important that minorities are free to practice their religion without discrimination, and the majority community has a responsibility to defend minorities.
Yet, besides respecting differences, if a society is to be cohesive, it needs shared values. In Britain for example in the past these have been provided by the established Church of England and more broadly by all the Christian churches. Today the faiths need to come together to affirm those shared values, as they have done in the Global Ethic – values which are also shared with many people of good will. Together faith communities need greater confidence in the moral values that they share – not as one group trying to impose its beliefs on others but because without trust and integrity a society implodes. The danger is that aggressive secularists have exploited multiculturalism to create a-moral societies. Because something is fashionable it does not make it right. This, I believe, is a root cause of the banking crisis and in Britain the loss of confidence in members of parliament, the press, care homes, the police, sports, and the church – although it is only a minority in each institution that are untrustworthy. In some countries the moral vacuum makes possible high levels of corruption and in other places the violation of human rights.
This also means that those who have positions of leadership should themselves be people of integrity.
Faith communities also make an enormous contribution to education, health care, and social welfare provision. Often because they are rooted in local communities, they are much more aware of local needs than politicians or officials from outside. The partnership of government with faith communities is very important.
Of course, I also believe that trust in God’s goodness and mercy enriches our personal lives as well as contributing to a happy family life.
But what I have wanted to highlight is the way in which people of faith, working together, can help in the search for peace and especially the healing of a society after conflict, which requires the honesty to say sorry and a willingness to forgive.
The true importance of interfaith work is that it should be part of a multi-disciplinary search for a better world to which each of us have our own special contribution to make.
Rev. Dr. Marcus Braybrooke DD, is a retired Anglican clergyman. He was Executive Director Council of Christians & Jews from 1984 to 1987 and Chairman of the World Congresses of Faiths from 1978 to 1983 and 1992 to 1999, and is its current President. He is the author of more than a dozen books. His Lambeth Doctor of Divinity was presented by the Archbishop of Canterbury in recognition of "his world-wide work for inter-religious understanding and co-operation."
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