My
aim, as usual, is to try to provide a counter to the voices of Islamophobia and
help them to realise that there are alternative points of view; in Winston
Churchill's words, that "Jaw-Jaw is better than War-War!"
I
am the Salvation Army representative on what until this month has been known as
the Wellington (NZ) Council of Christians and Jews. As Muslim representatives
have also been attending this for about 8 years - as long as I have - we have
finally got around to launching our new name and constitution as the
'Wellington Abrahamic Council of Jews, Christians and Muslims' (in
chronological order of founding). This was formalised last week at a gathering
held at Parliament and hosted by the Attorney General, the Hon Chris Findlason
QC, himself a Catholic. The guest speaker was Paul Morris, Professor of
Religious Studies at Victoria University, Wellington (my old university and
head of the department in which I did my PhD), who is of course a Jew.
I was delighted that this event was attended by our Territorial Leaders, the Commissioners Donaldson, as well as by the Catholic Cardinal amongst many others.
I was delighted that this event was attended by our Territorial Leaders, the Commissioners Donaldson, as well as by the Catholic Cardinal amongst many others.
16 April 2015
At
the re-launch of the Abrahamic Council, Paul Morris, Professor of Religious
Studies at Victoria University, gave the following talk.
Tēnā
koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā tatou katoa; Shalom Aleychem; As salamu alykum; a
peaceful good evening to you all.
It
is an honour and a privilege to be here this evening of Tuesday 14th day of
April in the year 2015; or the 25th day of the month of Nissan in the year
5775; or 25th day of Jumada al Thani in the year 1436 (and, of course, 14 o
Paenga Whawha i te tau 2015 te ra). We all, both share a contemporary reality –
Aotearoa New Zealand with its Christian heritage although increasing secular
culture – and simultaneously also inhabit distinctive and different religious
universes with different histories and points of departure and arrival.
We
are here to re-launch the Wellington Council of Christians and Jews (CCJ) as
the Wellington Abrahamic Council of Jews, Christians and Muslims. This is a
timely development as Muslims have been welcome at meetings of the Wellington
CCJ since 2007. In 1995 the International Council of Christians and Jews (ICCJ)
established its “Abrahamic Forum”, a trilateral Jewish-Christian-Muslim
committee, to reflect the growing importance of Islam in Europe and the US, the
essential and urgent need for dialogue, tolerance and respect, and to work at
the overcoming of growing fears and prejudices. Since 2010 the ICCJ has
formally expanded the Christian Jewish dialogue to a Christian Muslim Jewish
trialogue. My report entitled in English, “Trying Trialogues”, failed to
maintain its pun when translated into German, Turkish, Hebrew or Arabic!
The
Council of Christians and Jews (CCJ), was founded in 1942 by Chief Rabbi Hertz
and Archbishop Temple during the Nazi persecution of European Jewry. The CCJ
was the product of a profound crisis. Seeing Cardinal Dew in the audience here
tonight, it is interesting to note that the Catholics pulled out in 1954 on a
theological issue returning only after the Vatican II Council. Christian Jewish
dialogue started haltingly and defensively with participants finding it
difficult to frankly address the history and legacy of Christian anti-semitism
and anti-Judaism, and the recent horrors. Issues of openness, proselytization,
prejudice, textual interpretation, and kashrut have kept life tense ever since.
Years
of effort, startling bravery, honesty and regular personal contact have led in
38 countries around the world, including New Zealand, to groups of people,
Christians and Jews, now generationally, who have come to know each other and each
other’s families. They have learned to trust one another and have come to
understand each other’s religious lives, values and concerns. The last sixty
years have shown that it is possible, if never easy, to further the project of
overcoming the past and to learn to live reasonably peacefully together. It is
important to record that this has been an ongoing struggle and at times these
relationships have been fragile, and have sometimes broken down, but the groups
have survived, grown stronger, and continue in their efforts to make the world
a safer, and I would say, holier place.
The
realities of migration and post 9/11 geopolitics demand that we too acknowledge
that we – Jews, Christians and Muslims – face a crisis. A crisis of anti-Islam and anti-Muslim sentiment, a resurgence of
anti-semitism, and an upsurge of religious violence, and that it’s time for us
to be courageous and honest with each other and try together to make the world
a better place. But is the invention of this new notion “Abrahamic religions”
anything more than a perfectly legitimate idea, that of, the inclusion of
Muslims into the mainstream Judeo-Christian fold in Europe and America? I’ll
return to this question in a moment below.
I
want to spend my remaining allotted time looking at the notion of the
“Abrahamic” academically and to make a point that I hope is helpful. “Abrahamic
religions” is a very recent coinage and has been utilized most widely since
2001. Peter Berger suggests that it dates from its inception as a response to 9/11.
Whether this is actually the case or not it is clear that since then it has
been widely in use in the academy and beyond. It has been valorized and
challenged, debated and discussed. In fact, Abrahamic religions has become a
new academic area as reflected in the new MA degree at the University of London
offered by Heythrop College; a new Oxford Studies in the Abrahamic Religions
series by Oxford University Press, kicking off with The Oxford Handbook of the
Abrahamic Religions (edited by Adam Silverstein and Guy G. Stroumsa). There is
also the Oxford Professorship in the Study of Abrahamic Religions, until
recently held by Guy Stroumsa (2009-2013). It is the subject of scores of
academic articles and a number of scholarly monographs. While some work is critical
and cautious what is developing is a wholly new understanding of the
intertwined histories of Judaism, Christianity and Islam (to put them in academic chronological order). This promising new
history offers a range of insights that might inform our thinking today in
Wellington and beyond.
In
his inaugural lecture, (“From Abraham’s Religion to the Abrahamic Religions,”
in Historia Religionum 3 (2011), 11-22*) Professor Stroumsa begins with the
very different Jewish, Christian and Muslim traditions of Abraham. He cites
Eusebius of Caesarea who begins his Ecclesiastical History by reporting that
Christ’s religion was discovered by Abraham and those “lovers of God that
followed him”. He goes on to say that while Jews claims to be these very
followers they are not, the new church is! He further traces these interpretive
traditions in the literature of the rabbis and the Church Fathers. A
particularly interesting reference is to Sozomen, a theologian from Gaza around
400, who describes the now lost annual festival of Abraham at Mamre, which
attracted not only Christians who came to acknowledge the spiritual father of
their faith; Jews to remember their “patriarch”; and, pagans because angels had
appeared there! We, Jews, Christians and Muslims, have all fought to claim
Abraham Avinu, Our father Abe, to be our exclusive progenitor but he belongs to
all three traditions and seemingly to others too from the region.
Stroumsa
explores “Abraham’s religion” (Millatu Ibrāhīm [Millat e Ibrāhīm] from the
Qu’ran (Sura al-Baqarah [2]: 130) and traces Jewish and Christian responses to
it and notes that these traditions differ markedly from most post-9/11 usages
of the term “Abrahamic religions”.
What is the study of the
Abrahamic Religions?
Put simply it is the three religious
traditions studied together not in isolation from each other. And
comparatively, that is, not in terms of which is better or worse but exploring the many similarities and equally
the significant differences. The study of Christianity, Islam and Judaism
(the put them in order of population) in this way reveals constantly
overlapping histories often missed when limiting research to a single
tradition, or even to two of them. Scholarly informed research on the three
traditions is as yet thin on the ground and in many cases has been avoided by
religious scholars on theological grounds. Besides some comparative
philosophical work on the Muslim, Jewish and Christian re-workings of Greek
philosophy and a number of local studies there is a dearth of comparative
research on the three religions.
Once
we free ourselves, however, of the idea that each tradition is somehow a
completely separate monolithic entity travelling solo through human history and
begin to explore the three great Mediterranean religions on the same page, we discovers that these three traditions
have an unbroken record of the creative exchange of ideas, rituals, practices,
institutions, myths, ethical insights, philosophical doctrines, and of course,
goods and services. That is, looking at Islam, Christianity and Judaism
together, anchored in specific local historical and cultural contexts. When we
examine the Abrahamic religions historically, structurally and
phenomenologically we learn that all three traditions have radically developed,
critically adapted, and dynamically changed, together.
The
truth is that there is no history of Judaism without sustained reference to
Islam and Christianity; just as there is no story of Christianity without
extensive consideration of Judaism and Islam; or, that there is not a history
of Islam that does not require the study of its continual engagements with
Christianity and Judaism. This is an academic viewpoint but one that I consider
to be entirely consistent to the theologies of the Abrahamic religions. To sum
up: Islam, Judaism and Christianity developed in interaction with one another.
End part One
Dr. Paul Morris
Professor of Religious Studies at Victoria University, Wellington, NZ
Dr. Paul Morris
Professor of Religious Studies at Victoria University, Wellington, NZ
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