July 13 & 20, 2003
James Solheim, Episcopal News
Service |
Archbishop of Canterbury Hosts Dialogue of
Christian
and Muslim Scholars in Qater
by James
Solheim, Episcopal News Service
While the war continued to rage in Iraq, Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams brought together 15 Christian Theologians and 15 Muslim scholars
to explore the use of Scripture in the two faiths in a “Building Bridges”
seminar in Qater.
In his opening remarks April 7, Williams thanked the Amir of Qatar for his
“exemplary commitment to this dialogue,” adding that “he has shown precisely the
kind of enthusiasm for honest exchange and deepened understanding which meetings
such as this are designed to assist.”
Noting that the foundation for the dialogue had been laid by his predecessor,
George Carey, in a similar meeting last year at Lambeth Palace in London,
Williams said, “Christians are Christians and Muslims are Muslims because they
care about the truth, and because they believe that truth alone gives life.
About the nature of that absolute and life-giving truth, Christians and Muslims
are not fully in agreement. Yet they are able to find words in which to explain
and explore that disagreement because they also share histories and practices
that make parts of their systems of belief mutually recognizable—a story
reaching back to God’s creation of the world and God’s call to Abraham.”
The purpose of the dialogue, according to Williams, was “to discover more about
how each community believes it must listen to God, conscious of how very
differently we identify and speak of God’s revelation.” That listening becomes
all the more urgent in times of conflict and anxiety, he said. “Listening to God
and to one another as nations, cultures and faiths have not always had the
priority they so desperately need,” he said.
“In this dialogue, we are not seeking an empty formula of convergence or trying
to deny our otherness; indeed, as we reflect on the holy texts we read, we shall
be seeking to make better sense of how we relate to the other, the stranger with
whom we can still speak in trust and love,” Williams said. In doing that, “we
learn more of the depths of what nourishes us in our own faith and we hope to go
from this dialogue better equipped to witness in a deeply troubled world, to
witness what faith and humble obedience to God and patient attention to each
other might have to offer to struggling and suffering nations throughout the
globe.”
The conference was planned well in advance of the military conflict in
neighboring Iraq and is part of a continuing process of engagement between
scholars of the two religions. “Christians and Muslims have much to learn from
each other,” Williams said before the meeting. He argues that the meeting is “a
clear demonstration that we do not have to be imprisoned in mutual hostility and
misunderstanding when our encounters are shaped by the scholarship and
experience” of participants.
According to Bishop Clive Handford, president-bishop of the Province of
Jerusalem and the Middle East, a confirmation service attended by almost 600
people was held during the seminar at the English-speaking school in Doha. The
archbishop preached, confirmed 16 young people of seven nationalities, and
Handford celebrated the Eucharist.
The archbishop also blessed the first stone of what will be the Church of the
Epiphany. Christians are free to worship openly in Qatar, thanks to the tolerant
policies of the Amir.
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