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Christian communities urged to be good neighbours to Muslims

Posted: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 4:16 (BST)
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Christian communities should improve their knowledge of Islam, be good neighbours to Muslims and bear witness to their faith in an appropriate manner, according to an international group of church leaders and experts on Christian-Muslim dialogue.

These were some of the recommendations put forward at an 18 to 20 October consultation aimed at developing an ecumenical Christian theological understanding of dialogue with Islam.

Convened by the World Council of Churches (WCC), the meeting gathered some fifty church leaders and experts on Christian-Muslim dialogue in Chavannes-de-Bogis, outside Geneva, Switzerland.

Participants acknowledged a history of "mixed" relationships between Christians and Muslims, with both positive and negative dimensions. On their part, Christians have seen Muslims both as friend and rival, neighbour and stranger.

However, participants agreed, Christianity teaches to love the neighbour regardless of race, gender or religion. Even more, Christian self-understanding is challenged and deepened through relationships with Muslims, while Christians themselves are renewed by entering into dialogue with them.

For this dialogue to be fruitful it needs to be sensitive, including a careful use of traditional Christian language like mission, witness and conversion. And both church leaders and communities need to be educated in the knowledge of Islam as Muslims live and present it.

While attitudes among Christians towards Islam are diverse and rich, different contexts and experiences of living together with Muslims inspire different theological approaches.

The consultation identified a number of issues to be addressed in further dialogue with Muslims, among others: human rights, conversion, concepts of secularism, pluralism, and citizenship, as well as the use of religious symbols for political ideologies and religiously motivated violence.

Participants also recommended further Christian-Muslim collaboration on issues such as social and economic justice, climate change, peace and healing of memories.

Organised by the WCC together with a number of Christian World Communions, the World Evangelical Alliance (WEA) and the Roman Catholic Church, the consultation is a continuation of an ecumenical process launched by the WCC in response to "A Common Word", a letter signed by 138 Muslim scholars and addressed to Christian leaders around the world in October 2007.

Rather than producing a written response to the letter by the Muslim scholars, the goal of the consultation was to provide a space for churches and communions of churches to share their initiatives and theological resources for engaging with Muslims, and to identify substantial issues for Christian theology in relation to Christian-Muslim dialogue.

Participants agreed on the need for further ecumenical exploration of theological issues pertaining to Muslim-Christian dialogue and invited the organisers to facilitate the process. A report on the consultation, including the presentations delivered and an account of the findings will be published by the end of the year.





The comments below are readers' personal opinions and are in no way intended to reflect the editorial opinion of Christian Today.

Added: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 21:41 (BST)

Nonie Darwish, a Christian ex-Muslim, founder of arabsforisrael.com, and author of 'Now They Call Me Infidel' (Penguin, ISBN 13: 9781595230317),said on Genesis TV last year, for Christians NOT to read the Qu'ran, as it was dangerous.

We are now being told by liberal, Scripture-apologising (not in the good way!) Church leaders to cosy up to Islam and read the Qu'ran, to understand where Muslims are coming from.

There is nothing wrong in getting to know the people, but the SYSTEM was, and remains to be, fundamentally violent. To try to witness the Gospel to them in the UK will get derision and sneers, if not up front, in most places, then behind mosque doors. Remember, it is the SYSTEM that causes these things to occur - Muslims are deceived people.

But to do so in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Northern India, Pakistan, etc, will get what many Christians and Gayle Williams got, and that for not preaching, but being a Christian (not to mention being a woman!). Even so, the Church in these places is growing, despite adverse persecution!

Jesus said 'by their fruits you shall know them'. This goes for Christians as well, but True Christians follow the teachings of Jesus - love God withh all your heart, mind, soul, and strength, and we have the Holy Spirit to help us do just that, and love your neighbour as you love yourself.
This is, if there is any law that Christians follow, the Law of Love, as set out in 1 Corinthians 13.

Muslims follow the laws of the Qu'ran, something that is confused, contradictory, and violent by it's nature, hardly a thing of peace, forcing conversion under pain of death. This is the law of FEAR, and causes obesiance. To Islam, to know Islam is to BE Islamic - subvertive conversion.

Christians are exhorted by Scripture to be as wise as sepents and as gentle as doves, and not to ignorant of of both the truth of Scripture or the wiles of the enemy. Do not be deceived, rely on the Holy Spirit's leading in relating with Muslims, emulate Jesus, and pray.

Do not be doormats for evil to walk over.

Chris Maguire, Ventnor, IOW, UK

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