Showing posts with label interfaith understanding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interfaith understanding. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

Finding Sabbath




Shabbat - Sabbath - Candles
When we gathered for Bible study last Wednesday evening at Seneca Presbyterian Church, our attention was focused on the text for this Sunday’s worship. It comes from Luke 6:1-16. That text contains two stories about Jesus, the Pharisees, and the Sabbath. I was anxious to press my friends and trusted colleagues on their experience of Sabbath as retirees – something I have no ability to imagine. (I can only dream of such things!) And we did have a nice discussion about the Sabbaths and Sundays of days gone by.


But I was a bit surprised when our initial focus of conversation was on the Pharisees. The participants in this group are earnest seekers who try to not only understand scripture in its historical context but also to listen for what the Spirit is seeking to teach us today. So they are naturally caught between the Pharisees of common understanding - what dictionary.com defines as sanctimonious, self-righteous, or hypocritical – and the actual historical reality of the first century. We talked about the Pharisees as a sect of Judaism that sought to carve out an understanding of faithfulness to the Law in a time of assimilation and accommodation. We remembered that the Pharisees and their movement survived the destruction of the Temple because they had crafted a life of faithful devotion that was not dependent on the Temple. But we also remembered how the Pharisees were (or at least are described as) the enemies of Jesus.

Perhaps I’ve listened to Amy Jill Levine too many times to ignore the conversation and simply move on. Anyone who has heard Dr. Levine speak on the way Christians interpret Judaism – especially first century Judaism – knows her passion for correcting errors and crushing stereotypes. (If you wish to read more, pick up The Jewish Annotated New Testament and read her article entitled “Bearing False Witness: Common Errors Made about Early Judaism.”) The passion is not merely academic. For if we allow the image of Pharisaic Judaism to be a religion of laws where Christianity is a religion of grace, we do both faiths a disservice. And we move dangerously close to the impression of how Christianity has been characterized by our Muslim friends. “You Christians have it so easy. If you do wrong, you just ask for forgiveness and then everything is OK.”

No doubt we will talk more about Pharisees in our Wednesday night group. And the discussion will be faithful. This group has studied the Hebrew Scriptures with Dr. Levine through her Great Courses lecture series. But the question also applies to the subject at hand for this week, namely the Sabbath. We must resist the temptation to allow the debate Jesus had with the Pharisees over Sabbath regulations to color our understanding of Sabbath – for it is an essential, life-restoring gift meant for Christians as well as Jews.  Unless we are careful, the Sabbath could been seen as a burden rather than a blessing.

We’ll explore that blessing when we gather for worship at Seneca Presbyterian Church this Sunday – the Christian Sabbath. Before we do, I invite you to consider: 

  •  What traditions marked Sundays in your childhood or even adulthood?
  • How have they changed?
  • Have the changes been a blessing?
  • What has been lost?
  • How can it be re-gained?

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Knowing Our Neighbors: Beginning the Interfaith Journey

Because of what happened in a movie theater in Aurora Colorado, the world changed today. Once again we have that numb feeling of utter shock and disbelief. For me, what is just as devastating is the premeditation and even delight a shooter seemed to take in executing such violence. I shall leave it to wiser minds than I to reflect more deeply on tragic suffering. My heart and prayers go out first to the victims and their families, including those in that theater who escaped unharmed physically - yet forever changed. My thoughts are also with every rescue worker, health care provider, and police officer who must continue to live the tragedy, along with a community who will still be grieving and coping and struggling long after the world turns its attention elsewhere.

Yet there is another reason this tragedy is important to me.

Because of what happened today, what we will do at Seneca Presbyterian Church beginning on Sunday is even more important than it was 24 hours ago. We will try to bridge gaps of ignorance and perhaps fear as we undertake the first steps in a journey of interfaith understanding among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim communities. We will try to short-circuit divisions in our world that have for centuries been the source of far too much violence and suffering and death. And because of what we will do, I wonder how we will be different a week from today.

  • Will we increase our understanding and ease our discomfort with traditions and beliefs that are new to us? 
  • Will we be able to ask questions openly, with trust and respect? 
  • Will we go beyond learning about in order to learn of and with, putting the face of a brother and a sister in the place of what would have been a stranger? 
  • Will we deepen our own faith as we hear of another's journey of faith? 
  • Will we end the week better able to short circuit the stereotype or inflammatory remark, thereby somehow diminishing the risk of future violence in a divided world, if only by a whisper? 

If you can, join us beginning Sunday morning and continuing Sunday through Thursday evenings. We will gather at 6:30 p.m.

I pray the world will be different because we do.