Chapter 1 PowerPoint

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Chapter 1

World Religions and

Religious Pluralism

Religious Pluralism in Canada

• The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees “freedom of conscience and religion.”

• At Confederation in 1867, Canada had a population of around 3 million people, mostly Aboriginal, French, and English.

• Today, the population is about 34 million people of tremendous diversity.

• Canadians speak many languages, practice many religions, and come from many cultures and ethnic groups.

• All ethnicities, cultures, languages, and religions contribute to the fabric of Canada and its identity.

• By law, all Canadians should participate equally in every aspect of

Canadian life while preserving their cultural heritage.

• Key factors that led to Canada’s diversity are:

– Immigration

– Canada’s policy of multiculturalism

Canada’s Policy of Multiculturalism:

• The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees

– freedom of conscience

– freedom of religion

• The Multicultural Act of 1988 broadens these rights for all Canadians regardless of their religion, culture, language or ethnic group.

History of Religious Pluralism

• Canada has mostly been a Christian country.

• When the first explorers brought their Christian faith to Canada, it became the faith for most Aboriginal peoples.

• As immigration increased, so did religious pluralism.

• Canadians today practise many faiths including Sikhism, Islam, Judaism,

Buddhism, Taoism, Hinduism, Jainism, Baha’i, and Confucianism.

• Canada’s diversity of faith and culture will continue to grow in years to come.

Some Ground Rules for Living Together

1. Respect the faith and religion of others

To respect a person means to respect who they are.

Our faith is a large part of our identity and needs to be respected.

2. There is no neutral stance

– Each person has a set of beliefs by which he or she lives his or her life, and that influences encounters with other belief systems.

– To enter into dialogue with people of other faiths, Catholics need to be firmly grounded in their own faith.

3. The truth of other religions

– Those who follow a particular religion believe the teachings of their faith to be true.

– Despite the differences in our beliefs, it is important to appreciate and respect what others hold to be true.

4. Accept the importance of religion

Religion, even with its different forms, is important for human beings and their happiness.

Religious difference is a sign of human diversity.

Christianity celebrates this diversity while recognizing our oneness as children of God .

The Goals of Dialogue

Tolerance

– To be tolerant means to respect the rights and differences of others, but not to be afraid to speak out when the beliefs of another bring about injustice.

Interaction

– Religions must dialogue with each other, not just live peacefully alongside each other.

Christianity and Evangelization

• Why evangelize?

– because through Jesus we come to know God as healer, lover of the poor, and redeemer

– because of Jesus’ resurrection, we see Jesus as the Word of God incarnate

– through the stories of Jesus, we talk to others about God

Early Evangelization: The Great Commission

• Before his death, Jesus commissioned the disciples to go out and continue to spread the message of God’s love to all people.

• The disciples first went to fellow Jews but soon began to spread the message to anyone who would listen.

• The message of Jesus was not always accepted, but even at risk of their own lives, the disciples continued their mission, attracting followers

– by their example

– by the image of God they presented

– by the love they had for one another and the experience of how love broke down barriers between people

• Unfortunately, the relationship between Christians and Jews could not be maintained and they eventually parted ways. Christianity grew from a movement within Judaism to a religion.

Christianity and the Roman Empire

• In the 2 nd century, Christianity made inroads into the Roman Empire, healing the sick and forming powerful communities of faith.

– but they were still a minority—outsiders

• By the 3 rd century, great philosophical scholars began to also teach the Christian message, and Christians became the “cultured people” and a driving force in Roman society.

• In the 4 th century, Christianity became the sole legal religion of the Roman Empire.

A Mission to the World

• With the fall of the Roman Empire, the Church took on a new, important role in society.

– In the West, Bishops became civic leaders, judges and rulers.

– In the East, the Roman Empire was replaced by the Byzantine Empire, and the

Church was allied to the power of the courts.

• The focus shifted to a concern for the internal structure and dynamics of the Church, and gave rise to a new belief:

– Only those who gathered together to share God’s love within the sacred space of the Church could share in God’s love and salvation.

The Middle Ages

• Between 600 and 1500, Christianity became the dominant religion of Europe.

• It spread north and east into the Scandinavian countries, and far into Russia.

• Most evangelization was the work of monks who set up monasteries across

Europe.

• The Church opened universities, monasteries, and cathedrals, and became a strong political force in society.

• The belief that to be saved, one had to recognize Jesus as God’s Messiah led

Church leaders to pressure—and sometimes force—non-believers to convert.

Relations with Other Religions: Catholics, Jews, and Muslims

• After the destruction of Jerusalem by the Roman Empire, Jews became a minority living throughout Europe and were often forced to live in ghettos and wear distinctive clothing.

• During the Middle ages, relationships between Christians and Jews and between

Christians and Muslims were strained by conflict as Christians began a political movement called the Crusades to regain the Holy Land.

• Jewish towns along the Danube and Rhine rivers were attacked by Christian soldiers.

• In the 8 th century, Muslims conquered Christian strongholds in Africa and Spain.

• Then they began attacks on Christian Europe from Spain and Turkey, but were stopped.

• In 1095, the pope began a series of successful crusades to regain the Holy Land and protect Byzantine Christians in Constantinople.

• In 1291, Muslims recaptured the Holy Land and went on to conquer Constantinople in 1453.

• Muslim advances were finally stopped in 1683.

• Christian writers including Raymond Lull, St. Francis of Assisi, and William Tripoli attempted to engage Muslims in dialogue.

• In Spain, Catholic King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella recaptured their territory from the Muslim armies and expelled all Muslims and Jews from Spain.

Modern Times: 1500–1950

The Protestant Reformation

• Around 1500, some groups within Christianity called for major changes or reforms to the Christian Church.

• They broke away from the Church to create Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and

Anabaptist communities.

• Princes and kings felt forced to choose sides.

• Wars erupted between Catholics and Protestants.

Colonization and the Spread of Christianity

• In 1492, Christopher Columbus “discovered” America, and Europeans became aware of people who had never heard of Christ.

• At that time, Christians believed that other religions were “false” and people belonging to them needed to be converted in order to share in God’s saving love.

• Missionaries felt duty-bound to follow the explorers to America to spread the gospel and baptize the inhabitants into Christianity.

The Age of Dialogue: 1950–Present

The Protestant Reformation

• By the middle of the 20 th century, missionary approaches started to change.

The Church no longer wanted to be identified with the colonial practices of

Europe.

Dialogue replaced condemnation.

The Catholic Church changed the approach to other religions:

1) realization that there were good, worthy elements in other religions

2) renewed emphasis on bringing the message by focusing on the well-being of other peoples and providing socio-economic development in areas of education, medicine, and social aid

3) salvation was understood as being for this world as well as the next world

4) the focus was not only on the individual, but also on the community and society

Between 1962 and 1965, the Second Vatican Council became more publicly and officially involved, with documents emerging from the council dramatically changing the Church’s relationship with other religions

Catholics and Other Religions in the Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries

• In the 20 th century, technological advances contributed to the development of globalization and an awareness of all human beings as members of one human race.

• Religions had more and more contact with each other.

• They realized they needed to understand their differences so they might work together to make the world more livable.

• This began the long and difficult process of removing prejudices, distrust, and historical memories that contributed to conflicts in the past.

• During the gatherings of the Second Vatican Council, bishops, especially those from Asia, demanded the topic of interreligious dialogue be discussed at the

Council.

• The following are the guidelines that the Second Vatican Council decided should be considered in interreligious dialogue.

1. God’s Salvation Is Offered to All People

• Since Vatican II, the Catholic Church has taught that all human beings can be saved, even if they are not baptized or do not believe in Christ.

• Catholics believe God—Father, Son, and Spirit—is the creator of all humanity.

• All humans are images of the same God.

• All humans are one in spite of all their differences.

• There is only one way of salvation and it comes as a gift from God, offered to all.

Implication

• Other religions are ways of life that are filled “with a profound religious sense.”

• They can lead to salvation because all humans can achieve salvation by following their conscience.

• All human beings find their origin and ultimate happiness in God, whatever their religion.

• All religions are an expression of the quest to look for God.

• Catholics see goodness in the minds and hearts of men, and in their diverse religious practices and cultures.

2. Jesus Christ Is Present in Other Religions

• Catholics believe

– God is the creator of all human beings

– Because all human beings are created in the image of God, they are the image of the Trinity, and also reflect Jesus Christ

– Jesus is the only way to God

• During Vatican II, the Church professed the beliefs that

– God wants all people to be saved, even non-members of the Church

– there is one universal plan of salvation in which all humans take part, even if they don’t realize it

– Christ is present in other religions in some manner

– the fullness of Christ can only be found where Jesus is fully worshipped and followed

– the love in other religions is not separate from the love God has for all humanity in Christ

Implication

• Catholics see “rays” of Christ or “seeds” of the Word in other religions, even though other religions do not see Christ in their religion.

• Catholics speak openly about Christ to other religions to identify similarities and unity with another religion.

• Christ is the great mystery of God’s love at the centre of Catholic faith, and this is the message Catholics bring to others.

3. The Holy Spirit Is at Work in Other Religions

• The mission of the Spirit is to complete the work of Jesus and lead people to

Christ and to the full truth.

• The Holy Spirit completes and realizes what Jesus Christ set in motion during his life.

• Jesus’ story needs to be told everywhere.

• Catholics believe the Holy Spirit works within each person.

• The Holy Spirit offers all people the possibility of being associated with the paschal mystery, and therefore the Church recognizes there is much that is good, true, and holy in other religions.

Implication

• Catholics believe they may also come to a fuller truth about Jesus by listening to the workings of God in all religions.

• The same Holy Spirit that lives in the Church lives in other religions.

• What the Spirit does in other religions will not contradict what it flourishes in the Church.

• While many differences may exist among people, the differences are less important than the unity.

4. Dialogue Is Part of the Church’s Mission

• Interreligious dialogue is an act of the Holy Spirit leading people to the truth.

• Catholics believe the Holy Spirit flourishes in the Church.

Implication

• If the Spirit is at work in other religions, it must be found and appreciated and received by the Church.

• It is the Church’s mission to listen to what other religions have to say and discern what is of God and what is not of God.

• Dialogue is essential.

• The Church accepts that God is found in prayers, practices, insights, and traditions of other religions.

• If the Church fails to be receptive of other religions, it may be failing in its mission to proclaim Christ.

Proclamation and Mission

• The history of the Catholic Church is full of good and courageous works, and of holy and faithful people.

• At times, it has also lost sight of the dignity of all people of other religions.

• Catholics still believe what God did through Jesus Christ is essential for human life to flourish.

• The Church must and always will proclaim the Good News of the Gospel.

• The mission of evangelization, of bringing the Gospel to others, must continue.

• New efforts are being made to bring the Gospel to countries in the West, where people are doubtful and skeptical.

• Pope John Paul II called for a “new evangelization”—new in its enthusiasm, method, and expression.

• It should be done with respect to the different paths of different people, and with sensitivity to the diversity of cultures so that particular values are not rejected.

• Part of new evangelization is dialogue with other religions.

• The first aim is not conversation, but mutual understanding.

Four Types of Interreligious Dialogue

• All Catholics are called to participate in interreligious dialogue.

• In dialogue, Catholics give witness to what they believe, deepen their religious commitment, and seek to understand the other’s way of life.

• in 1991, the Church’s Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue outlined four ways of achieving dialogue

1. The Dialogue of Everyday Life

• It is a dialogue of courtesy, openness, and becoming good neighbours.

• It means sharing what we have in common: our joys and sorrows, helping the needy, understanding the challenges others face living in Canada as part of a minority religion or culture.

2. The Dialogue of Action

• The Gospel of Jesus aimed to create a new humanity, to take care of the poor and the sick, to bring back those who are excluded, to liberate the unfree and addicted.

• This concern for others, for their full development as persons and their need for freedom, is shared with other religions.

• Catholics can work with other religions for the well-being of humanity, to safeguard the rights of individuals, promote people’s aspirations for happiness, protect nature, show solidarity with the victims of injustice, and struggle for peace and justice.

3. The Dialogue of Theological Exchange

• Church leaders and theologians must take part in intellectual dialogues to understand each other’s religious traditions, ways of life, and spiritual values.

• Once mutual trust has been gained, bitterness from past actions, inconsistencies in each other’s positions, prejudices, and human rights can be discussed.

• Catholics will find reincarnation, worshipping of deities, polygamy, and the caste system unacceptable, but they must become part of the dialogue of truth.

• We must remember that the differences between people are less important than the unity.

4. The Dialogue of Religious Experience

• In several parts of Canada, people from different religious traditions come together to speak with each other about their spirituality.

• Catholics may explain to others about prayer life and meditation.

• They may talk about their beliefs and how they search for God.

• This type of spiritual dialogue can lead to a deep appreciation of what moves members of other religions, and a deeper appreciation of our own faith.

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