INDEX
| The Church exists to offer worship; to make known, by deed as well as word, the love of God in His Son Jesus Christ and, through the Holy Spirit, to draw people into a loving and ever deepening relationship with God and one another. The Church strengthens us to work for a world in which all human beings flourish physically, emotionally and spiritually, and in which the environment is cared for. Relations with people of other faiths are relevant both to the Church’s concern for a society and a world in which all human beings flourish and for its calling to draw people into a loving relationship with God. Since the Second World War, Britain has become an increasingly multi-racial and multi-faith society. Those with whom we work, who look after us in hospital or who live nearby may belong to a religion other than Christianity. If ours is to be harmonious society, we need to get to know and to respect the beliefs and practices of our fellow citizens who belong to other faiths and ways of life. This is likely to be an exciting and worthwhile experience, although it may also be demanding and disturbing. Equally, if religion is not to be misused and become a cause of division in our world society, we need to overcome past prejudices and misunderstandings. Increasingly members of many faiths are working together for peace, the defence of human rights, the relief of poverty and the protection of the environment. Indeed there are those who believe that the shared witness of people of all faiths to ethical and spiritual values is so vital to the future of our world, that they have coined the phrase ‘dialogue or die’. Often our knowledge of people of other faiths is based on ignorance and prejudice and their knowledge of Christianity may be as distorted. This is one reason why the relationship between religions has often been marked by hostility and persecution, as it still is in some parts of the world today, where religious differences embitter existing enmity. Further, many people believe passionately in the truth of their own religion and find rival claims to truth to be threatening. Indeed some Christians have found the claims and practices of some other religions disturbing, but many Christians have found that making friends with people of other faiths and learning about their beliefs and practices has brought great enrichment to their lives and both deepened and broadened their own Christian commitment. In this Document we give a brief overview of the main theological considerations and indicate some practical matters of particular importance, as well as providing a list of useful addresses and books for those who wish to pursue these concerns. It is difficult to estimate exactly how many people belong to other faith communities in Britain. The community figures given in Religions in the UK are:
Jains 25,000-30,000 Jews 300,000 Muslims 1,000,000-1,5000,000 Sikhs 350,000-500,000 Zoroastrians 5,000-10,000 As we get to know people of another faith, we may find helpful four guidelines suggested in 1981 by the British Council of Churches. i. Dialogue begins when people meet each other
ii. Dialogue depends upon mutual understanding and mutual trust
iii. Dialogue makes it possible to share in service to the community
iv. Dialogue becomes the medium of authentic witness
Lord of Life As monotheists, Christians believe there is One God who is the Creator of all that exists and recognise that God loves all people. Many Christians believe that in other religions people seek and find God. The Bible also suggests that God is the Lord of History and that, therefore other religions have a place in God’s purposes. Our understanding of God is, however, different in important ways. For Christians, God is most fully revealed in Jesus Christ – in his life and ministry, death and resurrection. Christians believe that the Word, God’s only Son, has made the Father known and that Jesus is the Saviour of the world. Christians will evaluate the claims of other faiths in the light of Christ. The Holy Spirit, as the ‘Lord and giver of life’ is always ahead of the church working in the world to bring love, truth and understanding to every part of the world, so that wherever love, truth and understanding are to be found in other faith communities, we can see this as evidence of the activity of the Holy Spirit. Reflection Those Christians who have entered into dialogue with members of another faith nearly always say that this has both deepened and broadened their faith in Christ. Such dialogue emphasises the importance of Christians having a clear understanding of their own faith, a trust in Christ and the confidence to witness to him. Christians also need some understanding of the beliefs and practices of members of other faiths. At times in dialogue, people may find they have much on which they agree, at other times there may be sharp disagreements – even when there is real love between the partners in dialogue. This reflects the ambiguity of the relation of one religion to another and the various attempts, none wholly satisfactory, which scholars have made to explain these relationships. Within the Church there will be those who emphasise the calling to proclaim Christ as Saviour and others who see their vocation, as ‘good neighbours’, slowly to build up trust and understanding. The situations in which Christians meet and talk with people of other faith are very varied – whether it be informal conversation in every day life or the more formal setting of a meeting for inter-religious dialogue. The character of the dialogue will also depend upon who is taking part and to which religion and branch of that religion they belong. Attempts have been made to label different approaches – for example as ‘exclusive’, ‘inclusive’ and ‘pluralist’ – but these often seem artificial and few people feel they quite fit the labels. It is perhaps too early to attempt a definitive statement of the relationship of Christianity to the world religions and we need first to listen more carefully to the varied experiences in this field of our fellow Christians. Mission Christians have sometimes thought of mission in too narrow a sense. The primary mission is God’s initiative to offer fullness of life to a divided and suffering world. At the start of his ministry, Luke says that Jesus read from the prophet Isaiah the words: ‘The Spirit of the Lord is on me, In reply to John the Baptist’s disciples’ enquiry whether he was ‘the one who was to come’, Jesus said, ‘Go back and report to John what you hear and see: the blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor’ (Luke 7,22). Luke ends his gospel with the Risen Christ saying to his disciples ‘repentance and forgiveness will be preached in my name to all nations’ (Luke 24:47, cp Matthew 28, 16-20). Christians are called to share this mission. The Church should try to hold together the preaching of the Gospel, the service of the needy and the transformation of society. The Anglican communion has identified Five marks or Strands of Mission, which have been widely discussed in the diocese. They are: To proclaim the good news of the Kingdom. To teach, baptise and nurture new believers; To respond to human need by loving service. To seek to transform unjust structure of society. To strive to safeguard the integrity of creation and to renew the life of the earth. In seeking to fulfil the last three strands of mission, many Christians are happy to work with people of good will of another faith or no faith. Many Christians witness by their actions and their care for others. Proclamation of the Good News remains the central strand of the Church’s mission, but Christians are not alone in wishing to share their faith with other people. Many of the world’s major religious traditions have within them a missionary impetus. This ‘derives from a conviction of their universal relevance and a consequent desire to share them with the opportunity for "enlightenment" or "salvation" or to invite others to adopt the same values and to follow a similar pattern of life’, as is recognised in a statement agreed by the Inter Faith Network of the United Kingdom on Mission, Dialogue and Inter Religious Encounter. Sadly, some forms of mission in several religions – often labelled ‘proselytism’ – have been insensitive and even aggressive. The statement of the Inter Faith Network itself recognises that ‘certain practices are objectionable in any missionary context … These are practices which involve unethical, emotional or intellectual manipulation of people who are vulnerable because of age, illness, isolation or social situation.’ Some members of other faiths, especially Jewish people, complain that they have been the targets of such missionary activity by Christians. In some parts of the world there are memories too of ‘Christian imperialism’. Christians have also to be aware that to a person of another faith recently settled in this country, the Christian religion can seem very dominant – much more so than it appears to faithful Christians who are aware of the widespread secularism in British society. Christians, while witnessing to Christ among people of other faiths, need to do so in a manner consistent with the love of Christ with full respect for the sensitivities and conscience of the other. Many of those who have been most involved in dialogue and community action are very aware of these sensitivities and of the slow and patient work required to build real trust between people of different ethnic, cultural and religious backgrounds. They may, therefore, appear to have muted the proclamation of the Gospel. Others who have been more intensely evangelistic need to be more aware of these sensitivities. There is room for more dialogue between Christians who adopt different approaches and a recognition of the need to seek the Spirit’s guidance on the pattern of mission appropriate to particular situations. 4. PRACTICAL MATTERS The increasingly multi-faith character of our society affects many people in their daily life. Community workers, youth workers, members of the police and other public services will meet members of several different faith communities. Christians involved in many areas of work will perform a useful service if they are able to encourage greater sensitivity to multi-faith issues amongst their colleagues.
Changing Patterns of Work : Contract or Covenant?
(ii) Guidelines for the Celebration of Mixed-Faith Marriages in Church. £1.00, by post £1.30.
d. TheUse of Church Buildings
e.Religious Education in LEA Schools in England and Wales
f. ‘CollectiveWorship’ in LEA Schools
h.Prisons
5. USEFUL INFORMATION Faith Communities in the Oxford Diocese There are Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Jewish, Buddhist and other faith communities in the Oxford Diocese. There are, for example, Hindu temples in Slough and at Middleton Stoney. There are synagogues in Oxford, Reading, Maidenhead and Milton Keynes. There are mosques in Oxford, Milton Keynes, Maidenhead, High Wycombe, Reading and Slough. There are Sikh Gurdwaras in Slough, Maidenhead, High Wycombe and Reading. There is a Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Milton Keynes and a Temple at Donnington, near Newbury. The Brahma Kumaris Global Retreat Centre is at Nuneham Park, near Oxford. This is not a complete list. Besides Christian churches and chapels, there are many other places of worship and religious societies in the area. The best source of information about faith communities in Britain is Religions in the UK: A Multi-Faith Directory, published by the University of Derby and the Interfaith Network for the UK. This should be available in public libraries, which may also have a list of places of worship in their locality. It is always difficult to keep any directory up to date. A second edition was published in May 1998. Current information should be available from the national office of the faith community concerned or from one of the interfaith organisations. National Offices of Faith Communities Baha'i Information Office, 27 Rutland Gate, London, SW7 1PD Tel: 0171 584-2566 The Buddhist Society, 58 Eccleston Square, London, SW1V 1PH Tel: 0171 834-5858 The National Council of Hindu Temples, c/o Shree Sanatan Mandir, Weymouth Street, off Catherine Street, Leicester LE4 6FP. Tel: 01533 661 402 Jain Samaj Europe, Chair of Jain Centre, 32 Oxford Street, Leicester, LE1 5XU. Tel: 0116-254-3091 Board of Deputies of British Jews, Commonwealth House, 1-19 New Oxford Street, London WC1A 1NF. Tel: 0171 543 5400 Muslim Council of Britain, P.O. Box 52, Wembley, Middlesex. HA9 0XW Tel: 0181 903 9024 Network of Sikh Organisations (UK), 43 Dorset Road, Merton Park, London SW19 3EZ Tel: 0181 540 4148 Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe, Zoroastrian House, 88 Compayne Gardens, London, NW6 3RU. Tel: 0171 328-6018 Information is also available from: Alliance of Asian Christians, Carrs Lane Church Centre, Carrs Lane, Birmingham, B4 7SX Tel: 0121 633 4533 CMS (Church Mission Society), 157 Waterloo Road, London, SE1 8UU. Tel: 0171 928-8681 Christians Aware, 10 Springfield Road, Leicester, LE2 3BD. Tel: 0116 270-8831 Churches Commission for Inter-Faith Relations, Church House, Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3NZ Tel: 0171 222 9011 Council of Christians and Jews, Drayton House, 30 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AN Churches Commission on Mission, Middle East Forum, at C.C.B.I. Partnership House, 157 Waterloo Road, London SE1 8UU. 0171-928-8681 CPAS (Church Pastoral Aid Society), Athens Drive, Tachbrook Park, Warwick, CV34 6NG Tel: 01962 334242 Faith to Faith: A Christian Consultancy, Reverend Colin Chapman, Trinity College, Stoke Hill, Bristol. BS9 1JP Tel: 0117 968 2803 Crosslinks, 251 Lewisham Way, London SE4 1XF. Tel: 0181 691 6111 Inform (for information about new religious movements), Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE The Inter Faith Network for the UK, 5-7 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SS. Tel: 0171 388-0008 International Interfaith Centre, 2 Market Street, Oxford OX1 3EF. Tel: 01865 202745 Interserve, 325 Kennington Road, London. S11 4QH. Tel: 0171 735 8227 National Society's Religious Education Centre, 36 Causton Street, London. SW1P 4AU Tel: 0171 932-1190 The Religious Education Centre, Westhill College, Selly Oak, Birmingham B29 6LL The Barnabas Trust, The Old Rectory, River Street, Pewsey, Wiltshire. SN9 5DB Tel: 01672 564938 The World Congress of Faiths, 2 Market Street, Oxford OX1 3EF Tel: 01865 202751 Religions in the UK lists further organisations and multi-religious study and resource centres. Local Interfaith Groups There are several interfaith groups in the area of the Diocese. These will welcome support from local congregations and may be able to supply speakers and information. Banbury Area Religious Education Centre, The Methodist Church, Marlborough Road, Banbury, Oxon OX16 8BZ High Wycombe Sharing of Faiths, 35 Trees Road, Hughenden Valley, High Wycombe, Bucks. Maidenhead Community Consultative Council, 14 Delmont Park Road, Maidenhead, SL6 6HT Milton Keynes Inter Faith Group, 84 Ramsons Avenue, Conniburrow, Milton Keynes, MK14 7BJ Oxford Round Table of Religions, Guru Kripa, The Old Rectory, Middleton Stoney, Oxon, OX6 8RZ Reading Inter-Faith Group, Lukars, 47 High Street, Theale, Reading, Berkshire RG7 5AH Information about local interfaith activity changes quickly. Please let the Diocesan Interfaith Council, c/o Diocesan Church House, know about developments in your area. Learning about other faith communities There are many sources of information about faith communities in Britain. The organisations listed above may be able to help. There are also many useful introductory books, some of which are listed in the bibliography. There are also opportunities for study, especially through the Distance Learning courses provided by Westminster College, Oxford OX2 9AT and through evening classes. There is now an enormous literature on the religions of the world as well as on Christian attitudes to other faiths. Here we list a few books which give an introduction to the religions of the world, which introduce the theological debate or which deal with specific issues mentioned above.
Introductions to the Religions of the World Handbook of Living Religions, Ed J Hinnells, Penguin. The Concise Encyclopaedia of Living Faiths, Ed. R.C. Zaehner, Hutchinson Living Religions, Mary Pat Fisher and Robert Luyster, I.B. Tauris and Co. The World's Religions, Ed. P.B. Clarke, Reader's Digest A Source Book for Earth's Community of Religions, Ed Joel Beversluis, CoNexus Press. Ethical Issues in Six Religious Traditions, Ed. Peggy Morgan and Clive Lawton, Edinburgh University Press Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, John Bowker, O.U.P. 1997. World Religions, The Great Faiths Explored and Explained, John Bowker, Dorling Kindersley 1997. The World’s Religions, A Lion Handbook, Lion Publishing. Christian Attitudes to Other Faiths Christians and Religious Pluralism by Alan Race, SCM Press 2nd Edtn 1993 Towards A New Relationship by Kenneth Cracknell, Epworth Time to Meet by Marcus Braybrooke, SCM Press 1990 In Good Faith: The Four Principles of Interfaith Dialogue, CCBI Belonging to Britain, Ed. Roger Hooker and John Sargant, CCBI Towards a Theology for Inter-Faith Dialogue CHP 1988 The Mystery of Salvation CHP 1995 `Jews, Christians and Muslims: The Way of Dialogue', in The Truth shall make you free, The Lambeth Conference 1988. Anglican Consultative Council Thinking Clearly about the Uniqueness of Jesus, Chris Wright, Monarch, 1997 Theology and Religious Pluralism, Gavin D’Costa, Blackwell, 1986 The Gospel in a Pluralist World, Leslie Newbigin, SPCK, 1989 Thinking Clearly about the Uniqueness of Jesus, Chris Wright, Monarch, 1997 Theology and Religious Pluralism, Gavin D’Costa, Blackwell, 1986 The Gospel in a Pluralist World, Lesslie Newbigin, SPCK, 1989 Specific Issues A New Way of Thinking, Guidelines for the Churches, The Churches'Commission for Interfaith Relations, Council of Churches for Britain and Ireland The Marriage of Adherents of Other Faiths in Anglican Churches, £2.50, by post, £2.90, Church House Bookshop, Great Smith Street, London, SW1P 3BN Guidelines for the Celebration of Mixed-Faith Marriages in Church, £1.00 by post, £1.30, Church House Bookshop, Great Smith Street, London, SW10 3BN Till Faith Us Do Part, by Rabbi Jonathan Romain. Fount, HarperCollins, 1996 Multi-Faith Worship? £3.50, plus postage, Church House Bookshop, Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3BN Communities and Buildings, Church of England Premises and Other Faiths, Church House Publishing, 1996. World Faiths in Hospital, A Useful Quick Guide, Chaplaincy Department, The St. Helier NHS Trust, Wrythe Lane, Carshalton, Surrey. SM5 1AA (0181 296 2306) Our Ministry and Other Faiths: A Booklet for Hospital Chaplains, Hospital Chaplains Council, Church House, Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3NZ (Plus other books) Building Good Relations with People of Different Faith and Beliefs Inter Faith Network for UK Mission, Dialogue and Inter-religious encounter. Interfaith Network for UK. Festivals in World Religions: Ed. Peter Woodward with Riadh El. Dronbu and Cherry Gould, Religions and Moral Education Plan (SHAP) 1998 Edt. All in Good Faith: A Resource book for Multi-faith prayer. Ed. Jean Potter and Marcus Braybrooke, World Congress of Faith, 2 Market Street, Oxford. SHAP Religious Calendar Places of Worship in Oxford, Oxfordshire County Council Calendar Shap Calendar and Handbook for Videos, Books, Festivals. The Shap Working Party c/o The National Society's R.E. Centre, The Festival Year The Religious Resource and Research Centre, The University of Derby, Mickleover, Derby DE3 5GX (A Second Edition has been published on 8th February, 1997). Acknowledgements The Council for Interfaith Concerns is grateful for the interest shown by many deaneries, chapters and P.C.C.s in the first draft of our document on interfaith relations entitled "At Home with Other Faiths". Members of the Council who have been invited to introduce discussion of the importance of the subject have listened carefully to comments that suggested how the document could be improved, and have relayed them back to the Council for help in its revision of the document. We have also written to consultants involved at a National Level for their advice on how "At Home with Other Faiths" might be improved, especially in consideration of the relation of dialogue to mission. In each case we acknowledge the detailed care with which they examined our document and suggested alterations which might allay criticism, or clarify a point made. Above all, it has been a great encouragement to have received positive appreciation from people of such eminence and experience in the field of interfaith relations. We are particularly grateful to: Brian Pearce Esq. And Dr. Harriet Crabtree of Interfaith Network UK The Revd. Canon Dr. Christopher Lamb, of The Churches’ Commission for InterfaithRelations, and The Revd. Colin Chapman, of Faith to Faith, A Christian Consultancy, Trinity College, Bristol. Finally, we would like to express the sincere thanks of the Council for Interfaith Concerns to Mrs. Caroline Gordon, of Cookham Dean, who has offered her skills in desktop editing free of charge and has unfailingly made sense of our notes and alterations with willing cheerfulness. |




