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Presbyterian
Principles for Interfaith Dialogue Part
1
Pluralistic U.S. and global societies are the context within
which Christians relate to people of other faiths.
Christians live among people grounded in other religions and
ideologies, or in none. If our immediate circle of neighbors
or friends does not reveal the religious plurality of the world,
we need look no further than our cities, our nation, and our
globally-connected world to see the diverse religious traditions
which increasingly intermingle there. In this environment, persons
and communities affect one another even when they are unaware
of doing so.
Part 2
God is the Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer of our world.
God's Spirit works in surprising places throughout creation
and is found even among people who are unaware of the Spirit's
presence.
The Creator endows all persons with God's own image and has
pronounced the world "good" in its wholeness and integrity.
God wills that, in newness of life, the world and its inhabitants
live according to the intent of their Creator. Even when we
have failed or have not affirmed God's presence, God continues
to be present in the world. We are called to attend to God's
work not only in our own lives but also throughout creation
and in all God's creatures.
Part 3
We are called to work with others in our pluralistic societies
for the well-being of our world and for justice, peace, and
the sustainability of creation. We do so in the faith that,
through God's Spirit, the Church is a sign and means of God's
intention for the wholeness and unity of humankind and of all
creation.
At a time when the cultural hegemony of the Christian religion
in many parts of the world is waning, we may have new roles
among other people.
- When religion is used for purposes of power, and when religion
is manipulated as an instrument of conflict, our role is to
be peacemakers and peacekeepers.
- When all inhabitants of the planet bear joint responsibility
for its life (e.g., for the environment or the globalized
economy), our role is to cooperate with others in seeking
mutually acceptable ethical standards for behavior.
- When privilege is granted to some and denied others, our
role is to be advocates for others' freedom, just as Jesus
approached others with full awareness of their freedom.
- When persecution is unleashed upon fellow Christians or
upon other religious communities, our role is to champion
the cause of those marginalized by their minority status and
to practice our own faith in ways that do not abridge the
freedoms of others.
Part 4
In our pluralistic world, we confess that Jesus is the truth
and the way; through him God gives life. Jesus does not point
to truth but is the truth, in his person. Jesus' life showed
the limits of religious words and propositions as objects of
our loyalties. Jesus made us aware of the truth found in knowing
God relationally.
- When we seek to discern God's presence in the world, we
look to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus as the
unique and sufficient revelation of God's love, grace, truth,
power, and righteousness. Jesus is Lord and Savior.
- When God gives us courage to engage in the giving and receiving--the
listening and speaking--of dialogue, Jesus is present. Through
the power of his Spirit, we are enabled to be truly ourselves
in authentic relationships.
- When we interact with others personally, Jesus offers reconciliation,
healing, teaching. Through his body, the church, he extends
his ministry of love.
- When we confess our faith, Jesus is proclaimed as our salvation.
Through him we share joyously the good news of life abundant,
with its invitation to receive.
- When we hear God's love for the world proclaimed, the risen
Jesus makes that love real and enables us to believe that
God wills salvation for all who will receive it. In Christ
are hidden all wisdom and knowledge and in him all things
come together (Col. 2:2-3).
Part 5
We are called to relate to people of other faiths in full
humility, openness, honesty, and respect. We respect both others'
God-given humanity and the seriousness of their spiritual quests
and commitments. It is our Christian faith in the Triune God
and our intention to live like Jesus, not our cultural standards,
that require this of us.
- We recognize that all religions, including our own, stand
under the judgment of God and we acknowledge our own sins
against others both in the historical past and in our own
times. These realities keep us from condemnation of others
while they encourage our own commitment to the Christ who
forgives and reconciles.
- We recognize that our culture relativizes and privatizes
all religion--propagating marketplace attitudes toward religious
choices. We pray for God's power to live in firm commitment
without trampling upon the God-given freedom that Jesus respected
and challenged in all persons. In our journey, we are helped
by ecumenical partners around the world who, with us, are
part of the church yet who live with different cultural values.
- We recognize the integrity of others' religious traditions
yet we avoid any attempt to create some new religious community
by merging our separate identity with theirs.
Part 6
We need to be equipped to meet others in dialogue and witness.
This calls for understanding our own confession deeply, adopting
appropriate forms of witness, and acting sensitively upon issues
requiring pastoral care. As we meet one another in dialogue,
we face our own needs.
- We need to explore theologically the significance of Jesus
Christ in our present-day pluralistic world.
- We need to learn to articulate our faith (personal and
corporate) in ways that can be understood by others, that
recognize both our own and others' experiences.
- We need to learn about and understand the religions to
which others adhere. Because our witness is relational and
dialogical, we ask others to teach us who they are.
- We need to discern idolatries of race, nation, or philosophy
that may become demonic forces in human life. Idolatrous ideologies
may be present in any religious system, including our own.
- We need to acknowledge that our fundamental relationship
is to persons, not religions and systems.
- We need to listen for others' concerns so that we may minister
to human needs in our common public life, interreligious families,
and shared religious celebrations.
- We need to recognize that others' religions have brought
them comfort, identity, and meaning. We are not called to
approach others in judgment but in awareness of God's limitless
love and grace.
Afterwords
Presbyterian Principles for Interfaith Dialogue adopted by
211th General Assembly (1999)
"As much as I can, [with people of other religions]
I should meet friendship with friendship, hostility with kindness,
generosity with gratitude, persecution with forbearance, truth
with agreement, and error with truth. I should express my
faith with humility and devotion as the occasion requires,
whether silently or openly, boldly or meekly, by word or by
deed. I should avoid compromising the truth on the one hand
and being narrow-minded on the other. In short, I should always
welcome and accept these others in a way that honors and reflects
the Lord's welcome and acceptance of me."
"The limits to salvation, whatever they may be, are
known only to God. Three truths above all are certain. God
is a holy God who is not to be trifled with. No one will be
saved except by grace alone. And no judge could possibly be
more gracious than our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ."
Study Catechism (#52,49)
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