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To Do or Not to Do?

26/11/2024

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The theology group that I go to each week has been reading Paul Knitter’s ‘Without Buddha I couldn’t be a Christian’. Overall, we’ve found the Buddhist insights helpful until this last week when the chapter was on social justice. Here the difference between a Buddhist approach and a Christian one is quite stark.  For Buddhists any sense of polarisation between good and evil or taking sides one against the other is not helpful and maybe even harmful as it simply encourages division and breaks the sense of interconnectedness that is at the heart of its view of the human condition. It’s not that Buddhists are against social justice or do not desire peace, but they see wisdom and insight as the way to achieving it rather than actively working to change unjust structures.  For Buddhists it is important to accept the way things are rather than having a discomfort with them so that we long for and actively work for a better world, trying to change unjust structures and establish a society which is just and peaceful. 

This is the approach of Christianity and Judaism. In his book ‘To Heal a Fractured World’ Jonathan Sacks sees a religion that keeps people satisfied with life and preserves the status quo as dangerous. For him Judaism is not a religion that reconciles us to the world. Rather it is a religion of protest. God, he suggests, “does not want the people of the covenant to be one that accepts the evils and injustices of the world as the will of God. He wants the people of the covenant to hear the cry of the oppressed, the pain of the afflicted and the plaint of the lonely. He wants them not to accept the world that is because it is not the world that ought to be.” Christianity coming as it does from Judaism echoes these thoughts. In the Lord’s prayer Christians pray ‘may your Kingdom come on earth ….as it is in heaven’, suggesting an ideal situation which is not dominated by power, wealth or glory but by the values of justice, peace, service, love, compassion, integrity, reconciliation, wisdom etc - a world in which we will all have a concern for the common good and indeed the good of all sentient beings. For many Christians this means engaging in protest, challenging unjust structures, engaging in social action and politics. Not to do so would be seen as somehow failing in our commitment to build the Kingdom of God – or at least contribute to it. 

Buddhists too of course recognise the social injustices of our time and the need to transform the oppressive and exploitative social structures that underlie issues such as poverty, climate change, racism, war etc. It was Thich Nhat Hanh, a Buddhist monk, suggested for the Nobel Peace Prize by Martin Luther King, who coined the phrase ‘engaged Buddhism’.  And Buddhist Joanna Macey works ceaselessly to bring about and encourage others to engage in what she calls the Great Transformation of society. At the heart of Buddhism is the desire to alleviate human suffering and to promote the flourishing of all sentient beings which is what the Kingdom of God is about.  The difference between Buddhism and Christianity is not in their recognition of injustice or their desire to alleviate it but in their approach for doing this. 

 For Buddhists the approach is not to tackle the injustice head on, the way Christians might do. Rather it is to recognise and accept that life is one of suffering and dissatisfaction and so there should be an element of acceptance and detachment from it. It is also to recognise that injustice, violence and war, are caused by greed, hatred and the delusion of forgetting our interconnectedness with the oppressor and the oppressed. As Tich Nhat Hanh’s poem Call Me by my True Names says, “I am the 12-year-old girl refugee on a small boat who throws herself into the ocean after being raped by a sea pirate and I am the pirate, my heart not yet capable of seeing and loving”.  In doing this a Buddhist is feeling the pain of the situation and seeking to feel compassion for everyone involved. The Christian maxim when it comes to peace is ‘if you want peace, work for justice’ and the Buddhist one is ‘if you want peace, be peace’. For a Buddhist therefore the work for social justice is not so much to actively engage but rather to change oneself and try to free oneself from greed, hatred and delusion through meditation practices, recognising that this can be a contribution to a broader social transformation that involves all sentient beings.  

While these two approaches seem to be in stark contrast to one another and our theology group favoured one rather than the other, I have my doubts.  Nicholas of Cusa talked of the coincidence of opposites and my experience of interfaith shows that sometimes apparent contradictions are complementary ways of looking at life and both contain wisdom and truth. It’s obvious, I think, that many of the ills of our society such as poverty and inequality, consumerism and fear of the stranger flow from greed; that power is involved in many of the conflicts around the globe; that we are incapable of seeing others as our brothers and sisters and contributing to the flourishing of our planet rather than exploiting its resources. A change of heart is necessary. Even Jesus said that the kingdom of God is within and that what is needed is repentance, a change of heart and perspective. It is this that will make our work for justice effective while realising that we can only do our small bit. For Christians this is one of the messages of Advent which starts this Sunday. Perhaps one of the advantages or even wisdoms of getting older is to realise with Rumi that “ yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.”



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Interspirituality

12/11/2024

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​This is Scottish Interfaith Week, an opportunity for interfaith groups, faith communities and other public bodies to engage in some kind of interfaith activity and alert their members to the importance of dialogue with faith communities other than their own. There will be events all over Scotland and it has the backing of Scottish Government ministers. But the events will not necessarily be religious. Some events will focus on culture and have a celebratory feel to them, inviting people of faith to enjoy one another’s company or learn about the host community’s culture and faith without any real dialogue. Others will focus on social harmony, offering an opportunity for people of faith and no faith to discuss issues that face us all as human beings whether they be global such as climate change and world peace or more local such as poverty or homelessness. For some, and I think this is true of Government, interfaith gatherings are important because they offer a possibility of peace and cooperation as a means of counteracting conflict and violence. And they give us the opportunity to get to know something of the other.

I have been involved in interfaith relations and interfaith week for decades now and have been to dialogues and gatherings that reflect all the above. I have enjoyed them, learned from them, organised them, been challenged by them but now find them rather dissatisfying. I have been to too many and have heard a lot of it all before. I feel that I have grown beyond much of it but would still consider myself an interfaith practitioner though my interfaith interest is more interior and I now think of myself as someone whose faith and spirituality encompasses and is enriched by other faiths. This is a classic case of having passed over into the world of other faiths to come back to my own with new eyes and a recognition of how the wisdom, spirituality and even practice of others can widen and deepen my own understanding of faith and spirituality. And there are others who feel the same, who see their focus as being on interspirituality as personal enrichment rather than on the more formal aspects of religious traditions that tend to be the basis of interfaith work.

The term interspirituality comes from Wayne Teasdale who spent 10 years as a Cistercian monk and continued the spirit of that life as a layman when he left the monastery. He was an author, a teacher, a social activist and an interfaith practitioner who was inspired by Bede Griffiths and like Bede Griffith saw himself as a Christian sannyasa who integrated aspects of Hindu spirituality into his own life. There is a tradition of this within Christianity – Jesuits in Japan who were able to integrate Buddhism into their Christianity, Benedictines in India like Bede Griffiths who found spiritual depth and meaning in Hinduism. There is even the phenomenon today of dual belonging like theologian Paul Knitter who calls himself a Buddhist – Christian and has written a book called ‘Without Buddha I couldn’t be a Christian’ – and he is not the only one. This recognition of a common stream of spirituality and wisdom goes far back in Christianity and in the 13th cy. Meister Eckhart spoke of “a great underground river that no-one can dam up and no-one can stop.” Matthew Fox sees this river as the shared wisdom that all religions hold in common and each religion as a well that gives access to it. There is an underground stream of life and divinity that all religions can tap into it in their own unique way.  And no matter what well we explore we can eventually reach the one river, the source that is beyond all names. As Nicholas of Cusa, a 15th cy cardinal of the Catholic Church said, “even though you are designated in terms of different religions, yet you presuppose in all this diversity one religion which you call wisdom.” It is because of this that we can touch and experience divinity when we pass over into the faith of another or dig deeply into the well of their spirituality for it is true that there is much in common within the mystical traditions of all faiths. And this is the reason why so many spiritual masters such as Rabbi Abraham Heschel or Tich Nhat Hanh find meaning and sustenance in the writings of Meister Eckhart.   

For me it is this aspect of passing over and digging deep that has been most meaningful in my interfaith journey. I was lucky to begin it when I went to university. Studying world religions and then teaching about them gave me an appreciation and respect for them as I tried to show students their inner richness and the beauty of their scriptures. I was touched by stories of the Lord Krishna and recognised the attraction of this flute player from my own attraction to things spiritual. Similarly, with some of the Upanishads such as this verse from the Chandogya Upanishad which spoke to me of the God who lives within us:
           In the city of Brahman is a secret dwelling, the lotus of the heart.                                                                       
          Within this dwelling is a space, and within that space is the fulfilment of our desires.                                           
          What is within that space should be longed for and realised.
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And so it has gone on over these years of interfaith work. I have learned so much through reading, conversations and friendships. I have come to appreciate the spirituality of others so that I feel my own religious faith has been widened and expanded to the extent that while I remain firmly a Christian it is a  Christianity that relates to and interacts with other faiths. 

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    I am  a Catholic nun, involved in interfaith relations for many decades.  For me this has been an exciting and sacred journey which I would like to share with others.

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