Archive for the ‘Publications’ Category

The Language of Interfaith Conversation

January 17, 2011

Etiquette is part of many disciplines, including interfaith dialogue. In this new article on our website, Canadian multifaith educator, JW Windland, argues that a sensitive use of interfaith language expresses our common humanity, builds relationships of respect and trust, and pursues peace.

When you click the link below, you will arrive at “The Principles and Guidelines for Interfaith Dialogue” section of our site. Next, click entry #12 which is “The Language of Interfaith Conversation.”

Here is the link:
 

Peace,
Paul McKenna
 

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Scarboro Missions Interfaith Dept.
2685 Kingston Rd.

Wisdom

October 23, 2010

The latest edition of Wisdom , the newsletter of the Elijah Institue is now available admin@elijah-interfaith.org

A Look at Christianity, Through a Buddhist Lens

October 23, 2010

A Look at Christianity, Through a Buddhist Lens

By PETER STEINFELS

Five decades ago, Paul F. Knitter, then a novice studying to become a Roman Catholic priest, would be in the seminary chapel at 5:30 every morning, trying to stay awake and spend time in meditation before Mass.

Last Wednesday, at the same hour, he was sitting on his Zen cushion meditating in the Claremont Avenue apartment he occupies as the Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World Religions and Culture at Union Theological Seminary in New York.

A few hours later he was talking about his pointedly titled new book, “Without Buddha I Could Not Be a Christian” (Oneworld). The book is the outcome of decades of encounters with Buddhism — and of struggles with his own faith.

Born in 1939, Mr. Knitter began his path to the Catholic priesthood at age 13, studied theology in Rome during the years of the Second Vatican Council, was ordained in 1966, completed a doctorate in Germany and began a long and influential career as a scholar addressing questions of the relationship between Christianity and other world religions.

He received permission to leave the priesthood in 1975, taught for many years at Xavier University in Cincinnati and after his retirement was invited to Union Theological.

“Am I still a Christian?” he asks in his new book. It is a question posed over the years by others, including some unhappy officials in the Vatican. But the question, he writes, is also “one I have felt in my own mind and heart.”

“Has my dialogue with Buddhism made me a Buddhist Christian?” he writes. “Or a Christian Buddhist? Am I a Christian who has understood his own identity more deeply with the help of Buddhism? Or have I become a Buddhist who still retains a stock of Christian leftovers.”

The struggles Mr. Knitter is writing about are not the familiar ones about sexual ethics, the role of women or the failures of church leaders.

His focus here is on what he calls “the big stuff”: What does it really mean for Christians to profess belief in an almighty “God the Father” personally active in the world, or in Jesus, “his only-begotten Son” who saved humanity through his death and bodily resurrection, or in eternal life, heaven and hell?

However much he tried, Mr. Knitter found that certain longstanding Christian formulations of faith “just didn’t make sense”: God as a person separate from creation and intervening in it as an external agent; individualized life after death for all and eternal punishment for some; Jesus as God’s “only Son” and the only savior of humankind; prayers that ask God to favor some people over others.

Mr. Knitter’s response, based on his long interaction with Buddhist teachers, was to “pass over” to Buddhism’s approach to each of these problems and then “pass back” to Christian tradition to see if he could retrieve or re-imagine aspects of it with this “Buddhist flashlight.”

He was not asserting, as some people have, that religions like Christianity and Buddhism are merely superficially different expressions of one underlying faith.

On the contrary, he insists they differ profoundly. Yet “Buddhism has helped me take another and deeper look at what I believe as a Christian,” he writes. “Many of the words that I had repeated or read throughout my life started to glow with new meaning.”

Those new meanings will unsettle many Christians, as Mr. Knitter recognizes, even as they address difficulties felt by many others. This will vary, of course, from issue to issue. Mr. Knitter’s translation of Buddhist meditation into a call for a Christian “sacrament of silence” may be readily welcomed. His search for a “non-dualistic” understanding of God and the world may be only leading him through Buddhism back to Thomas Aquinas.

“Perhaps I could have come onto these insights without Buddhism,” he said Wednesday. Yet even in those cases he often expresses these insights in language that will be debated, like God as “InterBeing” or “Connecting Spirit.”

When his comparison between “Jesus the Christ and Gautama the Buddha” leads him to conclude that both are “unique” saviors but not sole or final ones, he is treading, as he well knows, in a theological minefield.

One can predict that this book will receive instant condemnation from people who feel their duty is to protect Christian doctrine from wandering off course.

One can also predict that those condemnations will, in turn, make others hesitant to voice more nuanced, thoughtful criticism out of fear of piling on.

Mr. Knitter and his book deserve better. It is easy to draw up a list of substantial criticisms. For one thing, Mr. Knitter’s Christianity comes laden with all the impurities of popular piety and workaday theology while his Buddhism seems to be that of the best and the brightest.

Some readers may detect the reflex of the lifelong recovering cleric in his recoiling from whatever might appear to be patriarchal or excluding. And most important are questions about the nature and use of religious language for pointing to a mystery that can never be captured in human words.

Yet serious critics, no matter how major their differences, will not be able to ignore the enormous, almost disarming honesty of this book. Mr. Knitter admits his painful puzzlements and conducts his search for answers out in the open. He does not hide behind academic abstraction but writes clearly and personally and leaves himself open to correction.

Although he argues for a kind of religious “double-belonging,” he does not hesitate to ask whether this is ultimately a kind of promiscuity — or, as one of his students put it, “spiritual sleeping around.”

Mr. Knitter doesn’t believe so. But he has written his book in part to see whether fellow Christians agree.

Will his “double-belonging” resonate sufficiently within his own faith community that he can continue to consider himself a Buddhist Christian? Or if not, as he explained this week, will he feel obliged to recognize himself as a Christian Buddhist?

One need not have a stake in that outcome to find “Without Buddha I Could Not Be a Christian” a compelling example of religious inquiry.

 From the New York Times  October 10, 2009

Beliefs

Golden Rule Curriculum for schools and youth group

October 23, 2010

Scarboro Missions is proud to announce the publication of what we believe to be the most comprehensive Golden Rule curriculum ever produced in history. Using the logic of circles, rules, moral modeling and the Golden Rule, this curriculum unit inspires and supports young people to become global citizens rooted in the Golden Rule.The students’ learning experience is enriched through drama, art, music, group reflection, journaling and rap. The curriculum can be used in public schools, religious schools and youth organizations. This curriculum unit boasts a wealth of resources, websites, and Internet Links relevant to the subject matter. 

Titled “A Rule Made of Gold” and geared to an international audience, the curriculum is also available in Word and pdf format.

 This project, which has been in the works for eight years, was authored by my brother, Gregory, and a team of teachers from across Ontario.  

To view or download the new curriculum free of charge, go to http://www.scarboromissions.ca/Golden_rule/made_of_gold.php

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Scarboro Missions Interfaith Dept.
2685 Kingston Rd.
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
M1M 1M4
416-261-7135 ext. 296
www.scarboromissions.ca
 

“Let us love, since that is all our hearts were made for.”
Therese of Lisieux (1873-1897), French Christian saint and Carmelite nun

URI – Europe

August 27, 2010
The United Religions Initiative (URI) Europe’ s new Interfaith Dialogue Newsletter is now available at info@dmlbonn.de

August 27, 2010

“Founders of Faith: The Parallel Lives of God’s Messengers” by Harold Rosen is now available. (400 pages, $19 Canadian, $17 US, available through http://books.bahai.us).  

Harold Rosen (www.interfaitheducation.org)

URI Voice of Youth

July 26, 2010
URI Voice of Youth is now available at www.uri.org
 
United Religions Initiative
P.O. Box 29242
San Francisco, CA 94129-0242
Tel: +1-415-561-2300 Fax: +1-415-561-2313>

Gobind Sadan

July 8, 2010

Dear friends of Gobind Sadan, I am very happy to tell you that a new website is now online: www.storiesfromparadise.org. Lovingly designed by Guntas Randhawa of Synaptix Systems in Chandigarh, it contains never-before-published stories, photos, and spiritual discourses from Baba Virsa Singh Ji, plus the entire book of “Everyday Miracles in the House of God,” children’s interfaith plays from our weekly interfaith education class, articles about our gardens, and articles I’ve written on the spiritual life from time to time. I’m continuing to add more stories and photos, so please do take a look now and in the future as well. Maharaj was giving us a great treasure during his physical lifetime, and I was mostly just storing and storing whatever I could. Now that we’re opening the treasure chest, we’re finding such great jewels in it.

      If you like the site, please recommend it to your friends. And keep checking our main Gobind Sadan website, www.gobindsadan.org for new additions. We are also returning to putting out a quarterly newsletter for those who want print versions of the news. If you’d like to receive that but your address has changed, please notify priya@soon.com.     With many thanks for your support, and may Maharaj keep blessing you, Mary Pat Fisher

Interfaith Unity News

July 8, 2010

INTERFAITH UNITY NEWS: July edition is now available at   www.interfaithunity.ca                                        info@interfaithunity.ca

The Dalai Lama’s New Book

May 29, 2010
From Eboo Patel
One of the great global leaders of our time, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, is focusing his attention on the importance of interfaith cooperation. In his new book, Towards a True Kinship of Faiths, he tells the world what this kind of cooperation means for the 21st century. He writes,  “Harmony among the major faiths has become an essential ingredient of peaceful coexistence in our world. From this perspective, mutual understandin g among these traditions is not merely the business of religious believers – it matters for the welfare of humanity as a whole.”
 
  info@ifyc.org  
Address postal inquiries to:
Interfaith Youth Core
910 W. Van Buren Street 4th Floor

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