Thursday, December 31, 2009

New Thoughts as a New Decade Begins


What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.


Romeo & Juliet, Act II, Scene 2.

Forty-five years ago, when I was a young US Army soldier stationed in what we then called West Germany, I met an Arab Christian couple from Lebanon who had a new baby. They graciously invited me to their apartment where we shared an evening of food and conversation. During our delightful time together, I noticed the mother and father frequently bending over their infant son and repeating the same word: “Allah, Allah, Allah.”

The father explained, “We want his first word to be the Name of God.”

They were Marionite Christians, teaching their baby the same Arabic word for God as the followers of Islam use in prayer: Allah.

Westerners sometimes translate the great creedal statement of the Islamic world with the words, “There is no God but Allah,” as if our Muslim friends were praying to some alien deity. But the Arabic expression really means, “There is no God but God.” The same Divine Power celebrated in Lebanese Christian liturgies is addressed five times a day by 1.5 billion Muslims around the world.

It started me thinking…how many more things do people of different faiths have in common? Certainly, there are differences among the world religions. Not surprisingly, civilizations separated by geographical, cultural and linguistic barriers have solved their spiritual equations differently. Diverse spiritual traditions have inspired rich cultural heritages—beliefs, practices, and theological nuances; characteristic music, dance, and art—which make each faith distinct from all others.

Yet, all the religions of humanity seem to offer a sense of wonder, reverence for life, ethical teaching, some form of the Golden Rule, and an abiding sense of life’s okay-ness because, despite all appearances to the contrary, God has everything under control. Beyond these rudimentary similarities, much healthy diversity is readily apparent.

As I reflected on my Lebanese Christian friends in Germany and their Muslim countrymen back home, it occurred to me that all parents want similar good for their children. Happiness, wholeness, a sense of purpose, and a faith which sets them free to be the best person they can possibly be. Whatever combination of phonemes we select to identify the mystical presence and power of the Divine outpicturing in our lives—even if we find it difficult to use God-language at all—one could argue that the goal of a prosperous, healthy, joyful existence is the baseline hope of all sentient beings and the common religion of humanity.

Last spring I visited Sri Lanka and traveled in the company of Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims. The intense compassion for humanity and desire to leave our children a better world was indistinguishable among the faith groups I met. Perhaps this speaks to an even deeper common ground than ideas or culture or ritual.

Perhaps the universal yearning for meaning and wholeness indicates we have a self-correcting program running within humanity, and tendencies toward violence and selfishness must give way as we learn more about our brothers and sisters across the street and across the world.

Join me and ponder these thoughts about the underlying oneness of humankind in the decade now begun...

5 comments:

Unknown said...

I don't know who the previous posters are, but surely they are not in the right pew, nay church, nay religion, nay ..., nay...
I would like to ad to that Shakespeare quote something I read a long time ago, I believe it was one of the early women's liberation writers(perhaps Gloria Steinem): A rose is a rose, is a rose, is an onion.
Somehow or other I have formed the notion, that organized religion is the attempt to explain the spiritual experience in scientific or manifested terms, instead of just listening to the heart. Do I make sense?
hg

Melany said...

What's in a name? There is something in a name- a name encapsulates an identity. And yet, our God is too big to be summed up in a name- He is Who He Is. He first revealed Himself by name to Moses, when He told him to tell the people "I AM" has sent you. It is in His name that God is revealed, and it is in His name that there is salvation (Romans 10:13, Acts 4:12). Therefore God is very jealous for the glory of His name (Isaiah 48:12).

I have no problem with Arabic-speaking believers translating God's name as Allah, but it should be very clear as to the identity of the God that they worship: The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob who was revealed in His fullness in the person of Jesus Christ. It is in His Name alone that salvation is brought.

Kathy said...

Religion is like a net. The bigger you make the net, the more that can fit inside. The smaller you make the net, the fewer that can fit inside. If God (yours, mine, or ours) is the ultimate net thrower, or net keeper, how big do you suppose the net is?
Is there anyone among us whom can trully speak with the authority of God? Is there any one religion that has the corner on God? Is there any one sacred book that has dibbs rights on which one got it right? Which reminds me of an old joke. A Jew, a Christian, a Hindu, a Muslim, and a Buddist all arrived at the gates of heaven at the same time, looked at each other and for the first time all said the same thing, "What are you doing here?" Only the foolish mix faith with arrogance.

Melany said...

Response to Kathy: I disagree with the appropriateness of your analogy. "If religion is like a net..." -it is not. True religion is about a relationship with God. In order to be in a right relationship with God, we must relate to Him as who He is, and not who He is not.

We can define things (God, religion) so loosely that they cease to have any meaning at all, and whatever you might happen to believe fits nicely inside my "net." Or we can choose to relate to God as the one who is who He is... who He has revealed Himself to be in His word.

There are two problems with your net: 1) God is too big for your net. He is a God of wrath and love, perfect in judgement and in mercy. 2) Your net is too broad to encompass the Way by which we come to Him. It is a narrow way, and it has slipped right through the cracks in your net. God has revealed in the person of Jesus Christ- the Way the Truth, and the Life, without whom no one comes to the Father, and by whose name all may be saved.

DrTom said...

No one needs to be "saved" because no one is truly lost. Guided, perhaps. Loved, cherished, nurtured, encouraged, taught, empowered--yes. But dividing people into the sheep and the goats was one of the mistakes gthe authors of the New Testament made. And by the way, the people whom Jesus singled out for particular scorn were those who thought they were in possession of the sole route to God. He specifically praised a Roman pagan and conversed with tax collectors and a Samaritan woman. He never asked what people believe before he helped them heal. Jesus a spiritual being having that human experience.