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Radical Theology

3/5/2024

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 I recently came across a book by John Capito, a catholic philosopher with an interest in religion and theology and now professor emeritus  at Syracuse and Villanova Universities. The book’s title is ‘What to Believe, Twelve Brief Lessons in Radical Theology’ and the first chapter is entitled ‘God Does Not Exist’. I was intrigued because so often when I read or hear the word God, especially in liturgy, it sounds as though we are praying to a kind of superman somewhere outside the cosmos. This notion of God has become increasingly dissatisfying so to hear a catholic academic declare he was an atheist was refreshing and intriguing.
 
In the book he  explains exactly what he means by this. He is an atheist if by God we mean “ the supreme being who sees all, knows all, can do all, who is watching every move we make and is coming to get us if we do not behave ourselves and to whom we turn when things take a turn for the worst”. His atheism is what he calls  theological atheism.  Capito is more accepting of Tillich’s understanding of God as the Ground of our Being or the Apostle Paul’s as that Reality in which we live and move and have our being. He sees  this as an expression of panentheism in which God can be found in all thing but thinks it is only a stage in our understanding of God and that we have to make the next evolutionary step to what he calls radical theology.
 
For Capito there are two kinds of theology – that of bridge- builders, seeking a connection between humans and a supernatural being and ground- diggers who are trying to unearth the truth of what it means to say God is the very ground on which we stand. Radical theology is an example of ground-digging theology, at the heart of which is the question“what is really going on?” This is a discerning of the depth dimension of things or the dearest freshness deep down things as Gerard Manley Hopkins would put it. This is to be looked for in religion but also in art, music, philosophy, human history and relationships. Everything can reveal this dimension if we have eyes to see it but he warns that if in this digging “you see a binary opposition, look more closely and it will break down for one side is always inhabited by the other” for distinctions such as the separation of religion and the secular are false.  
 
When it comes to God Capito takes up Tillich’s notion that God is unconditional but he stresses the unconditional is not God. The unconditional is in fact prior to God. He uses a phrase of Schilling who says, “God is the absolutely un-pre- thinkable, that which is present before thought so how are we to speak of it. We can only do so in thought  and speech that is conditioned.“  The unconditional is not something we can meet because there is no-thing or person to meet or unite with. Rather it is the underlying support of the things we do meet, it is their underlying condition. Caputo tells the story of an old fish encountering two young fish and asking ‘ how is the water today boys’ and the younger fish asking once the older one has swum away ‘ what the hell  is water’? Although the unconditional is always and everywhere, we cannot meet it directly and can only think of it in terms of symbols. It’s up to us to find worthy symbols and avoid unworthy ones.  
 
Capito sees the word God as a symbol in which the unconditional is mediated and imaginatively constructed. He thinks that  what is going on in the name of God is an event, an event which reaches back to an un- pre-thinkable time and will end in an axial age when this universe as we know it will have died and we know not what will be, if anything.  At the heart of this event in which we are all participating is desire and Capito reflects on the first half of the famous phrase of St Augustine, ‘ you have made us for yourself and our hearts are restless …..    There is within us a structure of expectation, of openess to what is coming. He uses the illustration of a desire for a hat, once bought, can lead to a desire for further purchases, something we all know so well.  So he asks, what is really going on in this desire?  It is acting as a lure.  It is calling me, attracting me and demands a response. So too the name of God  is the name of a call that acts as a lure that calls for a reponse.  And how we respond to this will determine whether God is a worthy symbol or not. We are responsible for what is going on in that name. How we live is the basis for arguing for and against the existence of God.
 
There’s a lot I like about this theology. I like the idea of the word God being a symbol for what Caputo calls the unconditional. It allows me to use the word, to accept other people’s use of it without trying to translate  or dismiss it and not to confuse the symbol with the reality. I like the idea of the name of God as an event which is open to future possibilities. For me the best image of God I can think of is of God as a magnet because I do feel an attraction to spirituality, to commitment, to service, all that is part of being a christian or religious. This fits well with Caputo’s theology. And perhaps above all I like the question, “what is really going on”, a question which is intriguing and challenging an one that will accompany me into the future.  

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Naming God

16/4/2024

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I have been religious all my life. I was brought up to believe in God, to go to church, to pray, to learn my catechism. One of my earliest memories is of my grandmother, after whom I am named and who died when I was 4 years old, reading stories of the saints to me. They captured my imagination. To be holy, to be a saint was an ideal that was put in front of us in school and I loved going to church, not quite knowing what was happening but caught up in the mystery of it all. In secondary school the ideal of religious life was put before us as was the sense of being called to spread the gospel. I remember the words, but not the tune, of one hymn that appealed to me, “ On high adventure I am set to win souls back to Thee, O gird me with that steadfast faith that leads to victory”. This was an adventure that I was happy and ready to engage in and led eventually to me entering religious life, something I have now been living for nearly sixty years. 
   
Central to this interest in religion was a belief in God and I loved God with all my heart. It’s not that I had no theological questions  but to accept a loving God came easily in spite of theologising about suffering and death. This sense of a relationship with a loving God was developed and deepened by daily meditation, reflection on the gospels and the teaching of Jesus, spiritual reading and the annual retreat that as a religious I am obliged to make. Eventually this notion of loving God expanded to believe that God loved me at the very core of my being and accepted me totally for who I am, strengthening me and supporting me as I struggled with life as we all do.
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It took some time before I began to feel dissatisfied with the word God.  The way people talked about God or addressed God in prayer made God into a superman or a Santa Claus- like figure. This was an interventionist God, who had created a world out of nothing and was able to oversee, control the world of humans. This was a God who made demands on people seeking that they do his will and able to intervene in all kinds of suffering from ending war, poverty and hunger to providing answers to more specific requests for healing or even good weather for the parish outing. This was a God that more and more people claimed not to believe in and a  God that did not reflect my own experience. So my image of God began to change. Not only could I not accept that God was male but that God also had to reflect the feminine as both men and women were made in the image and likeness of God.  And I could not believe in a God that was an all powerful being somewhere outside the bounds of the universe. Rather I believed that God was that Reality in which we all live, move and have our very being as the apostle Paul explained to the Greek philosophers on the Areopagus or the Ground of Being as Paul Tillich suggested. This was a God intimately involved in life and the best image I could come up with was that God was a kind of magnet, powerfully drawing us towards love and the fullness of life. This was a God whose power of attraction I had experienced throughout my life.

My interfaith journey has helped me see that this power of attraction is present in all faiths – and none.  Buddhism is well known for not believing in a creator god and some people would go so far as to say that it is not a religion but rather a philosophy of life. One of the deepest and most significant dialogues that I have experienced was a Buddhist – Christian dialogue led by a Tibetan Buddhist nun, Ani Lhamo and myself. It began with a week on Iona and lasted about 15 years when we would meet annually in Samye Ling, Holy Isle, a  Carmelite monastery as well as more ‘secular’ places. The week on Iona that began the dialogue remains in my memory as one of the most  meaningful that I have experienced.  Ani Lhamo and I spent the week talking, sharing our faith and preparing the sessions we were offering in the Abbey while enjoying the sun and beauty of the island. We became good friends, with a real sisterly connection and I for one recognised the common attraction we had to spirituality, an attraction that had led both of us to a lifetime of commitment in a religious community. I could relate this attraction to God but it did not seem to be so different from that of Ani Lhamo’s who did not believe in a creator God but did believe in a Reality that we participate in  and draws us to itself. In Mahayana Buddhism this is called Tathata which is often translated as “suchness” and is seen as the true and essential nature of reality that is beyond description and conceptualisation and cannot be adequately expressed. This is the God of the christian mystics such as Meister Ekhart who famously said ‘ I pray to God to rid me of God’ realising that the word God can not only be off putting but obscure the truth of reality.  
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 Hinduism has also taught me a lot about the Reality we call God. The vedic phrase ‘the Real is one though known by different names’ makes sense. The stories of young women being attracted by the Lord Krishna’s flute to dance the night away, believing that each of them had a unique and special relaionship with Krishna has resonance in my own experience and the notion of God with attributes and God without attributes allows for the  tension between a personal God and an Impersonal Reality which is perhaps all I can hope for at this stage of my life.
 

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Resurrecting Jesus

5/4/2024

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 I was invited to take part in a radio programme on Easter Sunday. It was a magazine programme and the producer was hoping to have a slot on the Resurrection and hoped I might be interested in talking about it. I wasn’t free so unable to do it but it got me thinking about how I might explain the Resurrection or what kind of questions I might be asked.  Growing up I took the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection at face value and gave little thought to it.  My first real challenge to understanding it came when, as a young sister,  I did a summer theology school and the learned Jesuit who was taking the class asked if a photographer had been present when two of Jesus disciples encountered him on the road to Emmaus would there have been two or three figures in the photograph. The idea that there might only have been two figures was rather startling. And yet all that I had been taught about the resurrection was that it was not a resuscitation. In John’s gospel there is the story of Jesus bringing Lazarus, the brother of  Martha and Mary back to life and it was always impressed upon us as children that the resurrection of Jesus was in a different category. Jesus was alive, we were taught,  in his community, in his word contained in the bible and through his spirit present not just in his disciples but present where ever people showed forgiveness and love and worked for justice and peace. 

What actually happened at the moment of resurrection as it is told in the christian gospels is not known. What is known is that a group of disciples who were distraught and afraid after his death were transformed into a believing community prepared to continue Jesus ministry of teaching and healing in the face of opposition and persecution. There are contradictions in the story of Jesus’ appearances. When Mary Magdalen first encountered Jesus when she went to visit the tomb she took him for the gardener until, in the story, he called her name and she realised that the relationship she had with Jesus in life had survived beyond death.  When the two disciples were on their way to Emmaus, talking over the events that had happened in Jerusalem, they only recognised that they were accompanied by Jesus when they broke bread together. The apostle Thomas was doubtful about talk of resurrection until he came to terms with the reality of Jesus suffering and death, described in the gospel as him touching the wounds on Jesus hands and side. There was something familiar yet different about these encounters with Jesus. Even Paul who did not know Jesus in the flesh came to believe in the resurrection when he had an experience on the road to Damascus during which he heard a voice ask, ‘why are you persecuting me?’  and, having asked who the ‘me’ was, being told that it was Jesus whom he was persecuting. This revelation rendered Paul blind for a time when no doubt he wrestled with what could be taken as a kind of koan or a riddle that has no rational answer.  How can he be persecuting Jesus of Nazareth when he was dead?  The identification of Jesus with his community, a community he was persecuting,  was an aha moment, an insight that transformed his life and led him to see the life, death and resurrection of Jesus as transformative for all and the focus of his preaching.

​For me Jesus is alive in his community when it keeps alive his memory and puts his teaching into practice. Often this community distorts his memory and obscures rather than reveals his message. But there are many good and even heroic examples of ordinary people struggling to live a life of love and compassion, suffering for what they believe in, opposing injustice, walking the way of peace, trying to make their place in the world as life-affirming as they can. When we see incidents such as these on a large and small scale we see  that Jesus is indeed still living, in the spirit if not in the flesh. These are truly signs of the Kingdom of God that was so central to Jesus’ teaching and is all around us if we have eyes to see. For Christians the belief that Jesus is risen  is a sign of hope that death, destruction, tragedy, evil will not be final, that in spite of evidence to the contrary life and love will triumph. But above all  I believe that death and resurrection which is so central to the story of Jesus  and often taught as doctrine is in fact the basic Christian practice.  We Christians are called to die to selfishness and greed, to let go of this moment to welcome and engage in the next, to let go of resentments and conflict to be open to forgiveness and reconciliation, to let go of our abuse of the earth to treat it with reverence and respect – the list in endless. We are called to stand up for what is true and just even when it’s difficult.  It is not an easy practice but in so far as we can live by it – or try to live by it- we too can offer hope to our world and can share in the  resurrection of Jesus. Easter is a time of rejoicing for Christians but also an invitation and  challenge on how to live and keep alive the memory and presence of Jesus. 

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International Women's Day

17/3/2024

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Friday 10th March was International Women’s Day. It’s an opportunity to recognise and honour the achievement of women throughout history and to fight for gender equality which is not yet a reality for many women. The day gives interfaith groups an opportunity to focus on women as part of their annual programme of dialogue.

I took part in two events. One was rather unusual in that the three speakers were men. The thought behind this was an exploration of what it would mean for men to be allies in the discourse on gender equality and for women and men to be equal partners in society, so why not hear a male voice? The  topic is  too great for a one-off dialogue but it did raise some interesting questions e.g did any women ever found a religion?  The answer of course was  no, though there are examples of important and influential women who began religious movements in Hinduism and founded religious orders in Christianity and are respected within the tradition.  Within these contexts women have shown themselves to be competent and inspirational leaders but not given a leadership role within the institutional hierarchy of the religion. This is very obvious to me as a Catholic for in my Church women cannot be ordained and religious services with a number of clerics on the altar during a Eucharist can seem quite oppressive and certainly exclusive. Even in religions such as the Baha’i faith where equality between men and wome is seen as indispensible for harmony  in society men usually outnumber women in their governing councils and their supreme council, the Universal House of Justice has only male members. None of this is surprising because all religions have been founded and developed within patriarchal societies and are conditioned by that culture. And religions are traditionally conservative bodies so change is a slow process.
   
 The second event I attended was an account of the work of an interfaith group on domestic violence. The purpose of this group is to raise awareness of domestic abuse, particularly within faith communities and they have developed challenging resources to help in this. Domestic abuse, sexual harassment, bullying  are universal in all societies whether they be religious or not and the group wants to make faith communities aware that religious communities are not immune to it. There wasn’t a  woman in the audience who hadn’t some experience of this, either in her own life or in that of a family member or friend. It’s important that faiths face up to this but also that they face up to those elements of their scriptures or traditions that can be used to legitimate violence or exclusion, without necessarily realising it. Take the christian religion as an example. Jesus attracted a lot of women to his movement and it appears from the scriptures that they were often leaders in the small christian groups that met in one another’s homes, even leading the worship. However this went against the norms of Roman or even Jewish society and before long the apostle Paul was directing women not to talk in Church or appear with their head uncovered. Societal respectability became more important than the ideals of the faith.

On the whole religion has been ambivalent about women, speaking of them in ideal terms which are often very different from their reality.  Women are to be venerated but also feared as they can be a distraction and temptation to men and bring shame upon their families and communities if they became pregnant or rebelled against the tradition.  Because of this they are to be kept under control, confined within the man-made boundaries which has traditionally meant confined to the home and to handing on the tradition of the faith but not participating in leadership or leading public worship. Traditionally menstruation and childbirth have been seen as rendering women unclean, impure. For example, Hindu women do not lead family prayers when menstruating and in pre-Vatican II Catholicism women had to go through a purification service called churching after childbirth.

The patriarchal society in which religions have grown up is hierarchical and reflects Aristotle’s belief that “the relation of male to female is by nature a relation of superior to inferior and ruler to ruled.”  This view influenced the great Catholic theologian Thomas Aquinas who also accepted that women should be subject to men and saw man’s superiority as coming from the fact that he had been created first and directly from God while woman had been created from man and therefore not quite made in the image of God in the way that man was – a view found  in the Christian scriptures such as that of Paul’s letter to the Corinthians where he says “man was not created for the sake of woman but woman created for the sake of man” or the letter to Timothy which suggests "Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence”. The Qur’an also states that men are in charge of women because Allah has made one of them to excel the other, the woman’s role is to serve her husband. It even states ‘I have not left any disorder more damaging to man than woman’. And in the Buddhist tradition the Buddha is reported as saying that his Sangha would not last as long once women were admitted. 

One of the difficulties within religion is that often these kinds of statements are taken at face value and given divine status and can be used to legitimise violence and dominance. Thank goodness scripture scholars and feminist theologians recognise this bias and are emphasising positive attitudes to women in the scriptures and reclaiming the stories of the strong independent women to be found in all faiths.  But the reality still exists that texts and traditional attitudes can and still do give legitimation to some men to control women. This too needs to be publicised.  

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Religious Experience and Dialogue

27/2/2024

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 I have spent the weekend at a symposium dealing with the role of religious experience in interreligious dialogue, organised by the Scottish Catholic Bishops Committee on Interreligious Dialogue. It’s not a topic that’s often discussed in interfaith circles but it’s an important and interesting one. The first question of course is what is a religious experience and Professor Will Storrar who facilitated the event settled on a sociological understanding of what he called ‘ordinary’ religious experiences to distinguish them from the overpowering peak experiences that some people undoubtedly have and that often lead to a conversion, whether that be of faith or way of life. The understanding of ordinary religious experience that Professor Storrer offered was that of a human experience that is interpreted within a particular religious framework. This suggests then that the experience itself is not  religious but rather it is the story or interpretation that is given to it that labels it as such. It is well documented by projects such as the Alister Hardy Research Centre on Religious Experience that many people have experiences of the numinous, something that points beyond the mundane even though they are not religious and today many people are happy to claim they are spiritual but not religious, recognising a transcendent dimension of some sort to life but not subjecting themselves to religious authority or belief. I often hear older people lament the fact that the younger members of their family who have given up religion are deprived in some way or other by the absence of religion in their lives which can suggest that we believers think of ourselves as a bit superior.  I  want to disagree with this because deep down I believe that the experience of the transcendent is available to everyone and in that sense ‘unbelievers’ are not deprived of what is surely a human reality but might in fact be reacting against the very interpretation given to the experience by religion. What would be an example of this?

 I would imagine  that the birth of a baby would be one such instance. I don’t have children of my own but from my neices and nephews and great neices and nephews I have been in awe and wonder at the new life that has come in to our family. So I can imagine that this would be an overpowering experience for parents and particularly for mothers.  A wonderful experience but is it necessarily a religious one?  According to our definition it is the interpretation of this experience that makes it religious. It can be interpreted as a gift from God leading to a  great sense of gratitude;  the baby seen as reflecting the face of God and welcomed with an intense love. So far so good but what if the story and interpretation suggests that this beautiful creature is the bearer of an original sin that alienates it from God and can only be reconciled with God through baptism. This is the traditional christian story which more and more  people are finding  hard to accept and which has led some to reject the interpretation and even religion itself because it doesn’t adequately explain the reality of the experience. Connected to this too was the ritual of ‘churching’, when a new mother would go to Church for a blessing and ceremony of purification before returning to active membership of the community. This is obviously a throwback to a time when women were thought to be unclean during mentruation and child birth but I know women who have rejected catholicism because this experience was so alien to their human experience. They chose to give up their religion rather than their humanity.

Religious experience is an important part of interreligious dialogue and one to be encouraged. So often interfaith events are reflections from the point of view of each religion on a topic of common interest – side by side events rather than the face to face conversations that allow for insight into the religious experience of the other which then awakens a religious experience in oneself. John Dunne, a Catholic theologian, has said that the spiritual adventure of our day is to pass over into the world of other faiths and return to our own to see it with new eyes. For me this has been true. I have been privileged to study world religions and to  teach them, hopefully with respect and an understanding of what they might mean to believers. I have read and introduced students to the scriptures of other faiths and been touched  by both their beauty and wisdom. I have been to festivals and services in places of worship which has given me an insight into what worship means even if it was not a religious experience for me. On two occasions I was privileged to travel in India with two Hindu friends, husband and wife. For them this was a religious pilgrimage, sensing the holiness of what was for them a holy land. One instance stands out for me. It was when we went to Allahabad where the three sacred rivers, the Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati meet. It is a custom to go to the meeting point by boat, bathe and make prayer and offerings to God. I’m afraid I didn’t bathe but my friend did and was moved by what was for her a cleansing and liberating ritual. I felt I could understand these sentiments and was affected by her devotion and response.

Another significant moment of a religious experience within the context of dialogue was with my Tibetan Buddhist friend Ani Lhamo.  We were leading a week on the island of Iona at the invitation of the Iona Community. The weather was glorious and the island sparkling in its beauty. Ani Lhamo and I planned our sessions together but each day had plenty of time to talk and share our experience of faith and of religious life. We sometimes tried to find readings that would take the participants in the course from the head to the heart. My memory is that I suggested Francis Thompson’s poem the Hound of Heaven, which talks of God’s search for us and finding us even if we try to run away from it. Ani Lhamo was very touched by this and it occurred to me that she and I felt the same attraction to spirituality and prayer which demanded a life-time commitment. Tibetan Buddhists do not believe in a Creator God and would not use God language to describe this attraction as I would have done. But the reality of the attraction was surely the same and the Reality which is the source of all life and in which we all live and have our very being, whether it be called God or a universal Buddha nature was surely the same – just described differently. 

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I have arrived ....

10/2/2024

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 I belong to a small theology discussion group.  We meet once a week and usually base our discussions on a book. At present we are reading  Leo Tolstoy’s  A Confession and Other Writings which raises a lot of questions that are pertinent today. Living as he did in the 19thcy Tolstoy experienced the horror of war, lived in an age which rejected the authority of the state and religion, was dissatisfied with the wealth and privilege into which he was born, longed for the simple life of the peasants and wanted a religion purged of dogma and mysticism. He was an idealist yearning for a practical religion which gave bliss on earth rather than promising future glory in heaven. Although attracted to the ritual of the Russian Orthodox liturgy he did not find it answered his questions about God and the meaning of life.

This attitude to religion is as relevant to the age in which we live as it was in Tolstoy’s time. Today the decline in religion is shown, at least in Europe, by falling numbers attending Church and the apparent indifference of many people to religion. For Tolstoy this decline is part of a process and he claims that all religions have the characteristics of birth, development, ageing, death and rebirth. It so happens that we live at a time of the ageing and death of much traditional Christianity. Many theologians and spiritual writers talk of the in between times as we seek a new language that speaks to the modern age, a new paradigm to explain the fundamental truths of the christian faith.  This may also be true of other faiths though we are likely to be at different stages in our development. The Baha’i faith which originated in Iran in 1844 for example is fairly new and so is still at the early stages of birth and development, unlike the older and more established faiths. And it always seemed to me  that Tich Nhat Hanh was a bit of a genius in his ability to express Buddhist teaching in a  way that touched people’s humanity, rather than using traditional Buddhist philosophical terms. He understood that religious teaching was like a finger pointing at the moon but it would only take people to the moon, to the heart of its meaning if the finger, the expression of it was meaningful and related to people’s human concerns and experiences.

For me the important thing about religion is that it should take us further on our human journey and help us live a meaningful and purposeful life. But it has to do this in a contemporary language that takes account of what we know about the cosmos and the universe we live in. The Greek philosophical language of the past doesn’t work any more nor the focus on original sin and the need for a redemption which comes through participation in a particular faith;  nor does the suggestion that we still live in a three – tiered universe with heaven above and hell below. We know we live in an evolving universe and are participants in this adventure of life. Rather than think of myself as created by God I see myself and others as called forth from the beginning of time, called forth through all the generations of our  ancestors to be given form and expression at this point in history. I see each human being including myself as a unique, incomparable expression of life, called not to find meaning outside of ourselves but rather called to give meaning to the whole process of life in which we are participating. We are privileged to be the ones to give meaning to the universe, to awaken it to its future possibilities and its future growth and development.  And we do this by our contribution to the well-being of our race and our planet in whatever way we can, as long as we are for life and not against it.

I have learned this from writers such as  Brian Swimme, Matthew Fox, Jeremy Lent, Cari Taylor, Joanna Macey, all of whom have helped me understand life and religion in an evolutionary way. I have developed a practice which I hope helps me integrate it into my life. Each morning I name myself as a child of the universe, the daughter of ….., the granddaughter of….., the sister of  ……. the aunt of ……. the great aunt of ……… and I pray for them, using the Buddhist prayer ‘ may you be well, may you be happy, may you be free from suffering’. I also make an intention that my day be for the good of all sentient beings, the well-being of the nations and the healing of the planet and I do this in union with all men and women past present and to come who have longed for, do long for and will long for the kingdom of God or if you are a Buddhist the Kingdom of Shambhala. But as a Christian I also make this intention in, with and through Jesus.

Tich Nhat Hanh’s saying ‘ I have arrived, I am home in the here and in the now’ is very appropriate for this approach and a good focus for meditation. I have arrived through all the stages of life and history to arrive, to be at home in the here and the now and I cannot be at home in the here and the now without being aware of the conflicts, the suffering, the struggles of the earth and its people and I hold that pain  in my heart as I do my bit for the future well-being of all. And where is God in all of this, someone might ask?  Right in the middle of it for are we not told that  God is that Reality in which we live and move and have our very being. 


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Understanding the Other

18/1/2024

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One of the principles of interreligious dialogue and interfaith relations is to understand the other as they would understand themselves. This is not always easy because of the differences in the understandings of faith within the community of believers in any religion. Should I understand the text book account of a faith, or the personal slant put on it by a believer, even if that is not accurate and even wrong according to the tradition? Should I be careful when talking of another faith to make clear this distinction and to share my own experience of that faith which may have come through reading, visiting places of worship or encountering the other in dialogue.

In my interfaith journey I have often encountered others whose knowledge of Christianity is not the same as mine and have sometimes been embarrassed at what I have heard said about Christianity or taken aback by lack of basic knowledge of the faith. On one occasion a Jewish friend suggested that because Christians believe in the Trinity they do not believe in the oneness of God. I have heard on more than one occasion a Buddhist comment on the christian understanding of  the human person as sinful, alienated from God until he or she encounters Jesus who had to die a terrible death in order to be saved, something the Buddhist considered to be quite negative and not at all helpful compared to Buddhism. My Buddhist friend had got this fundamental, evangelical understanding of Christianity from being part of a group of believers from different faiths who had attended a school assembly to give an account of their faith. This is what the christian participant genuinely believed but it is not how I would express my faith and I would want people to know and appreciate that there are other ways of understanding and expressing it. I once took part in a Baha’i programme that often quoted Baha'u’llah’s understanding of christian concepts which I did not recognise as true. Baha'u’llah would have got these from somewhere and even if some of them were valid expressions in the 19th century they were not in the 21st century.  Of course the point in exploring these was to show that a Baha’i understanding was better or more complete.

The reason this principle has been on my mind is because of what I read in Rabbi Jonathan Sacks reflection on last Shabbat’s parsha reading of the Torah.  The parsha was from the beginning of Exodus and carried on from the previous parsha  of how Moses failed in his attempt to free the the people of Israel from oppression and slavery in the land of Egypt. In this parsha God assured Moses that he would indeed lead the people to freedom and told him to announce it to them. Rabbi Sacks focuses on the verse that says “So Moses told this to the Israelites but they did not listen to him, to because their spirit was broken and because the labour was harsh”.(Ex. 69) Rabbi Sacks then expounds on this to show that “if you want to improve people's spiritual situation first improve their physical situation”. This he suggests is one of the most humanising aspects of Judaism which is a religion of protest against injustice, poverty, abuse etc.

This is good but he then suggests that Judaism is better at this than other faiths. He quotes Michael Novak, a catholic theologian,
 “Jewish thought has always felt comfortable with a certain well ordered worldliness whereas the Christian has always felt a pull to other worldliness Jewish thought has had a candid orientation towards private property whereas Catholic thought -articulated from and early period chiefly among priests and monks - has persistently tried to direct the attention of its adherents beyond the activities and interests of this world to the next. As a result, tutored by the law and the prophets, ordinary Jews have long felt more at home in this world while ordinary Catholics have regarded this world as a valley of temptation and as a distraction from their proper business which is preparation for the world to come”.

This jarred with me as it it is not how I would understand my Catholicism. Yes I was brought up to believe the catechism answer that it was better to care more for my soul than body because “what doth it profit a man if he gains the whole world and suffers the loss of his own soul” but also to believe that love and care for others was at the heart of Christianity. In western culture education, health, social justice were practised by the same nuns and monks who withdrew into monasteries but only to serve the world. There is a whole tradition of social justice teaching within the Catholic Church from the end of the 19th cy, now called integral human development. There is a theology of the kingdom of God that asks Christians to work for justice, peace, equality, inclusion in this world and a theology of incarnation which does not separate the spiritual and the material. So Jews reading this reflection I suggest would end up with a wrong idea of Catholicism. Did Michael Novak really believe this? It so happens that Rabbi Sacks indicates that the theologian was actually citing someone called Irving Kristol, a Jewish journalist but doesn’t say why. So is this quotation more a limited Jewish understanding than a contemporary catholic one?  I would suspect so.
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How do we get over this? Only be study, experience and dialogue. So what perhaps appears as a simply principle demands a commitment to getting to know the other as they would now understand themselves.

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Mending A Broken World

2/1/2024

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It is a new year. This century is nearly a quarter way through. A moment to pause and reflect. For some a moment to celebrate and party as it offers a new beginning and with that possibilities for the future. It is a time for wishing one another peace, happiness and good health for we face an uncertain future as individuals as well as common citizens of this planet that we all inhabit. We wish for peace and justice, health and happiness but we cannot be sure of any of it. This is a moment to hope that things will get better both for us and our families as well as the world. We cannot predict the future and in facing a new year are facing uncertainty for who knows how life will pan out this year.

 It so happens I  was given a birthday gift recently of Jonathan Sacks’ reflections on the weekly portion or parashot of the Torah that is read each Shabbat in the Synagogue. This week the readings are from the Book of Genesis which comes  to an end with the account of Jacob on his death bed, summoning his family so he can bless them before he dies. The verses that Rabbi Sacks focuses on in his commentary are the first two of chapter 49: “Gather around so I can tell you what will happen to you in days to come. Assemble and listen, sons of Jacob, listen to your father Israel”,  two verses seemingly saying the same thing but the second verse omitting any mention of the future. Rabbi Sacks quotes  Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki, aka  Rashi, an acclaimed authority on the Torah and the Talmud. Rashi suggests  that “Jacob wished to reveal what would happen in the future but the Divine Presence was removed from him.”  For Rabbi Sacks this is an essential element of Jewish spirituality. “We believe we  cannot predict the future when it comes to human beings. We make the future by our choices. The script has not yet been written. The future is radically open.”

This struck me as an appropriate and important message as we face a new year. There is much wrong in our world today – injustices, poverty, violence, zenophobia, all played out on our television screens so that we either become immune to the evil that exists or can no longer look at it or even despair that things will ever change. But  the future is an undiscovered reality and it will be what we choose it to be – but only if we are willing to change. This is the message of the prophets who do not foretell the future so much as warn people of the consequences of their actions. If we do not learn to respect and appreciate those who are different from us there will be prejudice and conflict; if we do not care for this planet climate change will bring about the death of the human race; if nations do not cooperate and dialogue with one another they will live in competition and constant war. Perhaps our desire for new year resolutions is an indication that we are aware of this at the personal level. I will not be healthy unless I exercise and eat healthily, I will not be in good relations with those who are dear to me unless I spend time with them, I will not live a fulfilled life unless I serve others – whatever it is that we would like for ourselves and our family. Of course this is not straightforward.  As St Paul has told us – the good I want to do I don’t do and the evil I want to avoid I end up doing as I know to my cost if I try to limit myself to chocolate once the box has been opened. What I need and perhaps we all need is a wider vision, an intention which will direct our actions and approach to life. This could be the intention to care for the earth and the environment, to seek the good of all sentient beings, to live in peace and harmony with others, to seek to live by love and compassion. It is this approach to life that makes us shambala warriors, transforming the society we live in by the way we interact with life. It is this approach that makes us workers for the kingdom of God, recognising and supporting  the good wherever we are.

 When I was a child we started each day with what we called the morning offering.  This was a prayer which stated that we offered our day for whatever God;s intention for the world might be. It was a way of putting us in a frame of mind for doing good and making even the simplest of actions meaningful. This prayer has gone out of fashion but to have an intention for each day is I think a good and important one. My own intention as I welcome each day is that it might be for the good of all sentient beings, peace between nations and the well-being of the planet – rather grand intentions but they are genuinely in my heart and I hope making this intention will influence my actions. But does it have any bearing in the world? Well I do accept the Jewish belief in Tikkun Olam that assures us that all our intentions and actions for good, small as they might be, are ways of mending a broken world. I believe the love and compassion we have towards ourselves and others as well as the environment has an effect on this world of ours. Perhaps like kintsugi, the Japanese technique of fixing broken pottery with gold, we can be the gold within the darkness of our world and be quietly and lovingly mending it.   

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December 20th, 2023

20/12/2023

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All the Light We Cannot See is a wartime Pulitzer Prize novel written ten years ago by Anthony Doerr but now a mini-series on Netflix. Although the novel was very successful the video doesn’t seem to have done so well though I’ve not yet seen it and so can’t pass judgement on it.  It’s the title of the book, however, that strikes me as insightful and carrying a message for us this Christmas. As we sing Christmas carols, send cards, buy presents we are surrounded by lights and candles, all reminiscent of this being a festival of light at a time of winter darkness. In the past it was Saturnalia that kept alive the memory that the sun would return after winter and now Christians in their celebration of Christmas keep alive the birth of Jesus whom they see and call the Light of the World, the Prince of Peace.
 
But where is this peace, this light that we claim Jesus brought into the world? It certainly isn’t obvious in our world today. In the prologue to John’s gospel we read that the life of Jesus was a light to humanity, a light that shines in the darkness, a light that was not overcome by the darkness.  It doesn’t say that the light would overcome the darkness or that it would disappear. What it does say is that the darkness will not overcome and dispel the light. It may even be that darkness is needed to reveal the light for it’s only in darkness that light can shine. It is this that gives Christians hope, that no matter how bad things seem to be there is always light and it will triumph. And it’s good to look for and be inspired by the lights that are surely shining in this dark world of ours.
 
For me some of those lights are to be found in ecological movements such as the Work that Reconnects, The Transformation Network, the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology, the work of Laudato Si champions here in Scotland, interfaith initiatives for Climate Justice – and these are only the ones I know about. There will be more and able to be multiplied many times over the world. There are also those longing and working for justice and peace, for dialogue between warring faction, cultures, nations and faiths.
 
Even in the land of Israel and Palestine there are peace initiatives in spite of the horrific violence at the moment, a violence we Christians can’t forget as so much of remembering Jesus is located in that part of the world. The website of Positive News lists twelve of these including The Parents Circle, Combatants for Peace, Women Wage Peace to mention just three.  I was heartened to hear of an Interfaith Conference hosted by Archbishop Emeritus Dr Elias Chacour of Acre, Haifa, Nazareth and all Galilee which took place at the Mar Elias Educational Institutions on 18th December. Mar Elias Educational Institutions include a kindergarten, elementary, junior high, and high school located in Ibillin, an Arab village in northern Israel, serving Muslim, Christian and Druze students from all over Galilee.  Archbishop Chacour had been asked by the Israeli Department of the Interior, Religious Affairs Section, to host this conference, because of the outstanding work he has done in promoting peace with justice on a practical as well as a theological level.  On being asked by the government team working on the conference he was asked if he would prefer not to have Jews present, the Archbishop said: "Of course, I want them present, we have to know what they are thinking. To progress in peace making with justice it is imperative to listen to all sides involved." Apart from our concern for the situation in the Middle East those of us involved in interfaith relations have a concern that the conflict is not played out here in our own country. People here in Scotland including members of religious communities have their own loyalties, histories and opinions which can easily polarise and become a competition in victimhood. There are a few initiatives now that are bringing together members of the Jewish and Muslim faiths to listen to one another in an effort to understand one another’s position and to stop the war destroying good relations here. I am not involved in any of these initiatives but find it encouraging to know they are happening.
 
This is the light that shines in the darkness which many do not see because they happen quietly and unobtrusively. For Christians Christmas is a reminder that we are children of the light, and must not settle, nor let others settle, for a world lethally scarred by violence, seared by heat, or darkened by fear, to paraphrase the World Council of Churches' Christmas message. It is for us to shine a light wherever we are. I received a Christmas card this year with a quote from Karl Rahner which sums it up, “ It is Christmas. Light the candles. They have more right to exist than all the darkness. It is Christmas that lasts forever. Then in that silent moment, the serious wonder of it strikes us. It is we ourselves lit from within by the radiance of God, who are called to be those candles of hope shining incarnate light on a world and a church too often lost in the dark.”

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From Them to Us

1/12/2023

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 You cannot make the revolution. You can only be the revolution. It is in your spirit, or it is nowhere.  This is a quotation from Ursula Le Guin and it got me thinking about the kind of revolution I would like to be, or at least engage in. It will be no surprise to discover that I would want to be part of a movement that recognises our common humanity and our common kindred with the whole of nature. I would want to be part of a movement that softened human hearts to feel compassion for those who are different and even those we regard as enemies. I would want to be part of a movement that recognises that all life is interconnected, that we are part of one system of life, interdependent as well as interconnected, and that we need to support and encourage one another in seeking the wholeness and well – being of all aspects of life for all living creatures. To do this demands negotiation, compromise, selflessness, and dialogue.  This dialogue must take place at all levels of society if we are not to think in polarities and see ‘them’ as separate and different from ‘us’.  Bill Clinton, speaking at the funeral of Martin McGuinness, said that in his lifetime he had extended the ‘us’ and contracted the ‘them’. This is what had enabled him to work with someone once regarded as an enemy for the peace of all.  I recently heard it said that our society is currently suffering an epidemic of division, intolerance, and "othering” and the conflicts and wars throughout the world show how easy it is to do that. We cannot possibly live in peace until we see one another as brothers and sisters and recognise our common humanity and the right of all to live in peace and justice.

For me interreligious dialogue is a way of doing that – a small way but hopefully an effective way, a pebble in the pond that will have ripples elsewhere. This is what some of us were trying to do last Saturday when we arranged to have a neighbourly walk around the different places of worship in the west end of Glasgow. It had come about at a lunch that some friends from the local church, mosque, synagogue, mandir and gurdwara had shared with the Jesuit community in our area. We planned the walk as our contribution to Scottish Interfaith Week and expected it to be a fairly quiet affair with no one faith taking the lead. Ninety-six people turned up and spent several hours and 12,000 steps for those who count such things walking together, enjoying the chat as we went from place to place, being warmly welcomed by our hosts and listening to a story about their faith. This was the first time most of the participants had taken part in such an event and the first time they had visited these places of worship. They were delighted with the experience and called for more opportunities to do it again. Many of them commented on the warm welcome they had received from every faith community and a sense of enjoyment at feeling at home in places of worship so different from their own. Some are even thinking of doing something similar in the south side of the city.

The event was mentioned in a national newspaper by a journalist writing a piece on antisemitism but unfortunately there were some errors in the article which was entitled “Glasgow’s multi-faith march was an antidote to hate”. Hopefully it was an antidote to hate as people got to know one another as neighbours and friends. During our little pilgrimage I was aware of marches within the city which were calling for peace in the Middle East but identifying with one side rather than the other through the placards and flags they were carrying. I had a sense that what we were doing might be a better contribution to peace, at least in our own city as it witnessed to unity rather than polarity. But it was not a march. It was a neighbourly walk and had been planned before Hamas attacked Israel on 7th October and was not “rooted in a desire to express empathy and provide comfort for Glasgow’s Jewish community”. It was indeed “a means of signifying hope, love and optimism” and rooted in a desire to overcome prejudice and ignorance. I’m sure some people would have expressed sympathy and concern to the Jews on the walk, but some would also have expressed that to the Muslims on the walk who have a loyalty and sympathy with the Palestinians living in Gaza and suffering Israeli bombardment. As people of faith, desiring peace we would have had our own sympathies and loyalties. The article, I’m afraid has caused some concern within the Muslim community and has led to some feeling the walk was used for political purposes and in danger of stressing the polarisation that we were trying to avoid.

This shows that dialogue and good relations don’t come easily and must be negotiated. Sometimes it feels like walking on eggshells. However, misunderstandings and upsets can be beneficial if they bring people together to dialogue about difficult issues in a safe space. Interfaith Glasgow and the Council of Christians and Jews recently did this by bringing Christians and Jews together to reflect on antisemitism, especially in relation to Israel and Palestine. Sometimes the dialogue was difficult, but it was honest and worthwhile. Perhaps this is the moment to do the same for Jews and Muslims. Pope Francis has said that interreligious dialogue is a gift of inestimable value. Surely this would be true if it was possible for our Jewish and Muslim sisters and brothers to be honest and open with each other about Israel/Palestine. Perhaps this will be a legacy of our interfaith pilgrimage. 
  

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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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