Who is God for us - Muslims and Christians in dialogue

[ point evaluation5/5 ]1 people who voted
Đã xem: 429 | Cật nhập lần cuối: 2/6/2016 10:31:10 AM | RSS

There was great excitement among the over 200 participants at the first Symposium of Muslim-Christian Dialogue sponsored by the Focolare Movement as they gathered to meet Pope Benedict XVI during his first general audience on April 27, 2005. “As pope for Catholics worldwide, Benedict is bound to look at world suffering, at unity and peace—and this is where Christians and Muslims find each other,” Ronald Shaheed, director of Masjid Sultan Muhammad in Milwaukee, Wis., told CNS. Pope Benedict welcomed the “growth of dialogue” between Muslims and Christians.


In symposia sponsored by the Focolare —two Hindu-Christian, one Buddhist-Christian and one Jewish-Christian have already taken place—one doesn’t find opinionated scholars trying to bolster their own theses or tearing down others’ beliefs. “The method followed during these symposia is different,” said Giuseppe Zanghi, co-director of the Focolare’s Center for Interreligious Dialogue. As he opened the conference, he explained, “We are here to share the most beautiful and precious gift we have received: the experience of being called by God.”


   With this premise, the participants were challenged to rediscover each other as brothers and sisters. “And this can happen,” Zanghi concluded, “by sharing with sincerity and openness of heart the gifts that God bestowed on each of us, trying to find harmony in our differences. All of us should listen attentively to each other, without prejudice, emptying ourselves in order to be welcome dwellings for the others.” This is a dialogue based on what has been built between the members of the Focolare and their Muslim friends during the last forty years.


Union with God

   The program began and the first papers were given from the Christian perspective by theologian Msgr. Piero Coda on God as Love, and from the Muslim perspective by Jordanian professor Amer Al-Hafi on the essence of “Ibada” (adoration-faith) in Islam. Coda started by speaking about Jesus who revealed the love of God as a Father. “Love is not only a name which describes God’s action towards created beings,” Coda said. “Love is the Name that expresses to human beings the essence of God, his own being.”


   The Professor Al-Hafi explained how “Ibada” is the unique term “that defines all that God loves and approves in the behavior of human beings: words, actions, and aspirations. Ibada, in fact, doesn’t restrict itself only to prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage and what follows from them, such as meditation and repentance. Since the goal of human life is Ibada/adoration, this is a program for life, embracing all aspects and actions of one’s life.”


   These words were food for thought for everyone. However, the power of union with God in the two religions was brought to light in a special way by the spontaneous testimonials offered by men and women passionate about God and love. That passion has not only transformed their lives as individuals and as a group, but has also had an influence on society, in politics, economics and in legal issues.


Love and Suffering

   Union with God and mutual love lead believers to experience a characteristic presence of God in the community. Theologians Shahrzad Housmand from Iran and Judith Povilus from the U.S. both spoke about how close God is to us. “The Qur’an goes even further,” Housmand said, “as if to show us God almost as a person next to other persons… It is a mystery. This is the passage: ‘There is not a secret consultation between three, but He is the fourth of them, nor between five but He is the sixth of them, but He is in their midst wheresoever they be’ (58:7). Yes, if three are conversing among themselves, God is there with them, not as some kind of abstraction, invisible and far away. On the contrary, God is with them, close to them.”


Judith Povilus presented the Christian vision of God’s presence in the community. “God’s presence among Christians who love one another is explicitly linked to Christ. This holds true not only because he gave us his commandment of mutual love, but also because he himself promised to be in us and among us, ‘Where two or three are united in my name, there am I in their midst’ (Mt 18:20).”


   A particularly moving subject was the insuppressible reality of suffering. Algerian professor Adnane Mokrani and Chiara’s first companion Natalia Dallapiccola led the participants through some readings which were more mystical than theological and showed how God fully manifests himself in the mystery of suffering. “The very nature of human life on earth is a trial; earth is a house of trial,” Mokrani said. “However, the concept of trial in Islam does not restrict itself to pain and suffering. Our Muslim faith teaches us that nothing happens in life that is not allowed by God. Nothing escapes his presence or breaks away from his wisdom, even when we are not able to discern its meaning.”


   Natalia Dallapiccola, starting from her own life experience, explained how central the mystery of Jesus’ death is for Christians, especially when he cried out in his abandonment (see Mt 27:46). And she read one of Chiara Lubich’s first letters: “Forget everything, even the most sublime things. He has to be everything for you.”

At this moment, experiences of life from every corner of the world, shared by participants of both religions, brought the discussions to an experiential level, where a faith that is really lived and its fruits appeared to be the same.


   The Presence of Two Great Absentees

   Pope John Paul II, recently deceased, was spiritually very much present at the conference, especially through the warm words of Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue. He recalled the amazing series of prophetic gestures and words of openness of John Paul II during his 27 year-long pontificate, starting from his trips to Egypt and Syria, to his visit to the mosque in Damascus in 2000.


   Although Chiara Lubich was not able to participate in the symposium for health reasons, she was present through her talk on union with God in the lives of Christians and in her special message. “I am certain,” she wrote, “that the love of God that envelops us all will make us experience that atmosphere of warmth and family in which we want to live out these days together.”


   Allal Bachar, director of Islamic and Arabic studies in Spain and Imam of Marbella’s Mosque, commented: “The examples of John Paul II and Chiara Lubich take us along the path of true dialogue, a dialogue that changes people’s hearts.” Mir Nawaz Marwat Khan, former Pakistan Minister of Justice, summarized the conference by noting that God granted the participants the extraordinary grace to learn about his presence.


      “If people were to know what has taken place so far,” superior court judge David Shaheed from Indianapolis said, “it would be more instructive than anything else. We’ve brought our communities together, showing how positive dialogue can result in concrete action.”


Mike Zanzucchi

New City Magazine - September 2005

Source:newcityph.com/issues.html