2023/08/02

Unity School of Christianity (criticism)

Unity School of Christianity

https://www.leaderu.com/



Unity School of Christianity

Russ Wise


  • The Unity School of Christianity is a classic new age cult. 
  • It has the appearance of being Christian; however, it holds pantheistic or new age beliefs at its core. 
  • Unity was founded by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore in 1889, and was later incorporated as a church in 1903 by the Unity Society of Practical Christianity in Kansas City. 
  • Unity is best known by its publication The Daily Word, used by many who are unaware of its doctrinal positions.

History

The Unity School of Christianity began as a quest for physical healing by its co-founder, Mary Caroline Page, known as Myrtle, the wife of Charles Fillmore. Even before their marriage in March of 1881 Myrtle had already developed an eclectic theology. Charles had a background in Hinduism, Buddhism, Rosicrucianism, and Theosophy.

They became students of metaphysics and after taking some forty or more courses Myrtle developed what was to become known as Practical Christianity. Myrtle became a practitioner of "mental healing."

A spiritual breakthrough came for Myrtle in 1886 when she attended a meeting lead by Dr. E.B. Weeks, a noted metaphysician. Dr. Weeks made a statement that would change Myrtle's understanding of herself and set her on a new course of spiritual development. Myrtle was in a state of mental and physical illness and had come to a point where she was not helped by either medicine or physicians. Dr. Weeks's statement that day brought her the healing she sought. She cherished each word of the phrase "I am a child of God and therefore I do not inherit sickness."

Myrtle believed that she had discovered a great "spiritual truth" regarding healing, i.e., by repeating this phrase as a positive affirmation she would be healed. She began to offer her services to others and soon developed a following of those seeking divine healing.

The Fillmores were students of Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, a mental healer and metaphysician. Myrtle was also a follower of Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science, who was likewise influenced by Quimby. Unity, therefore, was birthed by the Fillmores, but its roots go back to directly to Mary Baker Eddy and both directly and indirectly to Phineas Quimby.

According to Charles Fillmore the name Unity was adopted in 1895, denoting that Unity was devoted to the spiritualization of all humanity and took the best from all religions. He said the following regarding the eclectic belief system of Unity:

We have studied many isms, many cults. People of every religion under the sun claim that we either belong to them or have borrowed the best part of our teaching from them. We have borrowed the best from all religions, that is the reason we are called Unity. . . . Unity is not a sect, not a separation of people into an exclusive group of know-it-alls. Unity is the Truth that is taught in all religions, simplified. . .so that anyone can understand and apply it. Students of Unity do not find it necessary to sever their church affiliations.

Thus many Christians adopt Unity's teachings and bring those back into their churches, not identifying their "new" teachings as Unity's and thereby compromising the doctrinal integrity of the church.

Unity Doctrine and Theology

God

God is not a personality but a spiritual energy "force" or principle of love. Charles Fillmore in his book, Jesus Christ Heals, says that "God is not loving. God is love . . . from which is drawn forth all feeling, sympathy, emotion, and all that goes to make up the joys of existence."

Fillmore goes on to say, "God does not love anybody or anything. God is the love in everybody and everything. God exercises none of His attributes except through the inner consciousness of the universe and man." In other words, God is not a personal being but an energy or force that expresses itself as a pantheistic love that permeates all things.

H. Emilie Cady attempts to reconcile the seemingly incongruous possibility that God can be both personal and impersonal by her statement:

To the individual consciousness God takes on personality, but as the creative underlying cause of all things, He is principle, impersonal; as expressed in each individual, He becomes personal to that one personal, loving, all-forgiving Father-Mother.

It's obvious that Unity's understanding of who God is has fallen victim to its own syncretism. Unity, while attempting to identify itself as being biblical, has offered too much on the "altar of tolerance" and, thereby, has prostituted itself on the bed of other gods.

Donald Curtis, former minister at Unity Church of Dallas and author of several Unity books, has this to say about God: "Every one of us has planted within him a God-seed, and the business of life is to see that this seed grows, unfolds, and expresses in our world."

Curtis goes on to say, "As this seed unfolds through the development of the Christ consciousness, we fulfill our highest objective in this world."

The ultimate goal of those who follow Unity teaching is to recognize their "oneness" with the "Force," thereby realizing their true self, the God-Self. The god of Unity is an adaptation of Hindu belief regarding the divine. God is a part of His creation. God is in all things.

Jesus the Christ

Unity also holds an unbiblical view of Jesus. Donald Curtis agrees with Unity theology in that he believes that Jesus the man is fundamentally different from Jesus the Christ. Curtis says, "Christ is the universal principle of love and wisdom. Christ is the only Son of God, but this only Son of God lives in each one of us."

Curtis makes a primary deviation from biblical understanding in that he holds the position that Jesus is man and that Christ is divine consciousness. He states, "Let us prepare ourself so that the Christ may be born in our own consciousness!" In other words, our spirituality is based on the discovery that the Christ is inherently within each one of us regardless of our personal beliefs or affiliations.

Curtis continues: "When we say 'Jesus the Christ,' we must realize that Jesus represents man and Christ represents God in man." Unity distorts Christ as the Messiah and renders Him as a "universal principle of love" that resides in all of humanity simply waiting to be discovered through self-consciousness.

Unity, along with other New Age belief systems, espouses a mental and spiritual 'transformation' that will raise our consciousness. According to Curtis "there are levels of development through which we grow toward full Christ-consciousness when we are truly transformed, fully reborn."

The pantheistic nature of Unity is expressed in Curtis' declaration that "we let our self be ruled by the Christ within. We let the Christ teaching unfold in and through us in this great new age. We know that this Christ principle indwells every individual, no matter what his religious beliefs may be. . . . We give thanks for the realization of the mystical Christ, for the Christ consciousness alive in our life."

Unified Man

According to Donald Curtis, man's primary purpose is to recognize that he is divine. He states: "There is another teaching, however a higher teaching. It is that man has always existed as part of God, and that this God-self, which is the living Essence of everything, individualizes itself in man."

Curtis goes on to say that "within each of us there is a great, wise, and beautiful Being. This is what we really are--the living Essence of everything. We are evolving constantly. We have self- consciousness; now we must develop God-consciousness, a sense of universal unity. And we must endeavor to manifest this God- consciousness in our world to solve our apparent differences through love and understanding."

Unity teaches evolution, both physical and mental or spiritual. It teaches that mankind evolves toward Godhood and that this collective God-consciousness will be man's solution to all his problems. This teaching elevates mankind to divinity, a position that is far from biblical teaching.

In his book The Way of the Christ, Curtis says that "man is human, but he is first of all divine." He adds that "as we recognize and identify with the Christ within, we become one with the universal Self-God."

This is nothing more than Hindu philosophy dressed in Western garb: everything is a part of God and God encompasses all that is, whether it be animate or inanimate. This idea, pantheism, is widely held in the East and is being imported to the United States via every means available to man.

Salvation

H. Emilie Cady in her book, Lessons in Truth, says that "man originally lived consciously in the spiritual part of himself. He fell by descending in his consciousness to the external or more material part of himself." In other words, the fall of man was from the spiritual realm to the physical and this fall has caused him to suffer spiritual amnesia. Therefore man's dilemma is to reclaim his place in the spiritual realm through right thinking.

Unity teaches that as man discovers his innate divinity he continues to raise his consciousness until he becomes fully God- realized. Once man has achieved this state of understanding he recognizes that he is in perfect oneness with God and is not in need of redemption but that he is indeed the divine.

The unbiblical position regarding salvation held by Unity is clearly seen in the Unity publication, The Way to Salvation. This pamphlet states that "Jesus Christ was not meant to be slain as a substitute for man; that is, to atone vicariously for him. Each person must achieve at-one-ment with God, by letting the Christ Spirit within him resurrect his soul into Christ perfection."

Curtis says that "more than ever, we need to become quiet and focus upon the inner. We need to be still and to know that the presence within is God." When one becomes fully aware of this divine presence salvation is realized because the individual no longer has a sense of lostness.

Reincarnation

Unity teaches that the individual lives a number of lifetimes within one existence. Dr. Donald Curtis of the Unity Church of Dallas writes that "it isn't so important that we make it in this particular lifetime, as it is to realize that we do make it, because there is only one lifetime and it goes on forever."

Article 22 of the Unity Statement of Faith states, "we believe that the dissolution of spirit, soul and body, caused by death, is annulled by rebirth of the same spirit and soul in another body here on earth. We believe the repeated incarnations of man to be a merciful provision of our loving Father to the end that all may have opportunity to attain immortality through regeneration, as did Jesus."

Charles Fillmore rejected the standard understanding of reincarnation as described by the Hindu or the Buddhist. He could not accept their respective teachings regarding the Law of Karma or the Transmigration of the soul. For him reincarnation was a much more simple way for God to offer man a second chance at perfection.

This teaching of reincarnation is perhaps the most destructive of all the false teachings of Unity. The belief in reincarnation undercuts the primary tenets of the gospel. One would have to deny the deity of our Lord, His physical resurrection, and His Second Coming to accept the error of Charles and Myrtle Fillmore.

Reincarnation undercuts Christian doctrine in three ways. First, it assumes that God is impersonal and is therefore unknowable. Second, reincarnation denigrates the Atonement of Christ, and third, it denies the fact that Jesus physically resurrected from the dead. We need to look at each of these more closely.

The Bible does not offer any evidence to support these assumptions. On the contrary, the Bible clearly teaches that God is a personal Being and that He is knowable. Isaiah 43:25 and Jeremiah 31:20 tell us that God remembers; Exodus 3:12 and Matthew 3:17 say that God speaks; Genesis 1:1 and 6:5 along with Exodus 2:24 say that God sees, hears and creates. Elsewhere the Bible tells us that God is a personal Spirit (John 4:24 and Hebrews 1:3). Since God is a personal Being, He has a will (Matthew 6:10, Hebrews 10:7-9 and 1 John 2:17). Because God has an expressed will, He will also judge His creation (Ezekiel 18:30 and 34:20, and also 2 Corinthians 5:10).

Unity attempts to denigrate the Atonement of Christ in order to build a better case for reincarnation; however, the Atonement delivers man from the cyclical concept of rebirth. Reincarnation does not offer us either peace or hope. The Atonement offers us peace because we do not have to rely on our own righteousness, and it offers us hope because of what Jesus did on the cross. Jesus has dealt with our sin on the cross and our response is to simply accept His work on our behalf.

Likewise, Unity cannot accept a physical resurrection for our Lord. Unity holds that the disciples expected Jesus to be reincarnated, not resurrected. The biblical claims that Jesus rose physically, appeared to and was recognized by many, was physically touched by some, and ate fish with others are troublesome and must be explained away or spiritualized into meaninglessness if Unity is to seem plausible. (See Luke 24:16 and 31.)

Conclusion

The Unity School of Christianity is recognized as a cult because it exhibits several cultic characteristics. One such characteristic is syncretism. Syncretism is the attempt to combine or reconcile differing beliefs, usually by taking the most attractive features from several sources and combining them into a something new. Unity has taken what some would call "the best qualities" of various religious view points and combined them into a new and more acceptable faith.

Another characteristic of cults that is true of Unity is the denial of the biblical doctrine of salvation by faith in Christ's person and His finished work on the cross. In Unity, salvation comes by recognizing our inherent divinity and our oneness with God.

Unity is, in my opinion, the most deceptive of the cultic groups that use the word Christian in their name. Unity's distinction is that the follower of its teaching is encouraged to remain in his respective church home whether it be Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, or whatever. The followers of Unity considers their denominational affiliation as a mission field where they can subtly disseminate their ideas.

I recall that when I first became a believer and was attending a Methodist church, there was a particular woman in the church who often greeted me with the phrase, "Greetings to your higher self." It was a peculiar way to greet someone, yet I never asked her what she meant by it. It was several years later when I became a student of the cults that I understood the significance of her greeting. She was a follower of Unity's teachings, that each of us has the divine residing within us and that the higher self is God.

According to Charles Fillmore, Unity is the blending of various religions and belief systems into one unified system of thought. The Fillmores introduced beliefs into their system that had been commonplace in Eastern religions and occult practices.

The Fillmores introduced a pantheistic view of God to their followers and saw God as being both male and female. God is seen as an energy or force that resides in all things both animate and inanimate. Likewise God is seen as being impersonal and a part of His creation.

Jesus is a principle of "love" that brings oneness to all things. This Christ principle is present within each one of us and ultimately unifies us in a salvation experience.

Unity teaches that man's primary problem is that he has spiritual amnesia and needs to reconnect with his destiny. He needs to regain the realization that he is evolving toward divinity.

  • Salvation, according to Unity, comes by recognizing one's divine nature. 
  • Unity does not recognize the Atonement of Christ but rather 
  • seeks what Eastern mystics refer to as at-one-ment or realizing oneness with the divine on a spiritual level.

Since Unity does not recognize the work of Christ on the cross (the Atonement), but rather accepts evolution as a positive ingredient in man's spirituality, it is only logical that they embrace reincarnation as a valid system for spiritual enlightenment. As you can see, then Unity is not based on biblical teaching. To the contrary, it is heavily influenced by Eastern thought and belief. Unity is a classic New Age cult and is not Christian in any aspect of its doctrine or teaching.

© 1995 Probe Ministries


The Soul of Christianity by Huston Smith - Ebook | Scribd

The Soul of Christianity by Huston Smith - Ebook | Scribd:

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The Soul of Christianity: Restoring the Great Tradition


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"I have tried to describe a Christianity which is fully compatible with everything we now know, and to indicate why Christians feel privileged to give their lives to it."
—Huston Smith

In his most personal and passionate book on the spiritual life, renowned author, scholar, and teacher of world religions Huston Smith turns to his own life-long religion, Christianity. With stories and personal anecdotes, Smith not only presents the basic beliefs and essential teachings of Christianity, but argues why religious belief matters in today's secular world.

Though there is a wide variety of contemporary interpretations of Christianity—some of them conflicting—Smith cuts through these to describe Christianity's "Great Tradition," the common faith of the first millennium of believers, which is the trunk of the tree from which Christianity's many branches, twigs, and leaves have grown. This is not the exclusivist Christianity of strict fundamentalists, nor the liberal, watered-down Christianity practiced by many contemporary churchgoers. In exposing biblical literalism as unworkable as well as enumerating the mistakes of modern secularists, Smith presents the very soul of a real and substantive faith, one still relevant and worth believing in.

Smith rails against the hijacked Christianity of politicians who exploit it for their own needs. He decries the exercise of business that widens the gap between rich and poor, and fears education has lost its sense of direction. For Smith, the media has become a business that sensationalizes news rather than broadening our understanding, and art and music have become commercial and shocking rather than enlightening. Smith reserves his harshest condemnation, however, for secular modernity, which has stemmed from the misreading of science—the mistake of assuming that "absence of evidence" of a scientific nature is "evidence of absence." These mistakes have all but banished faith in transcendence and the Divine from mainstream culture and pushed it to the margins.

Though the situation is grave, these modern misapprehensions can be corrected, says Smith, by reexamining the great tradition of Christianity's first millennium and reaping the lessons it holds for us today. This fresh examination of the Christian worldview, its history, and its major branches provides the deepest, most authentic vision of Christianity—one that is both tolerant and substantial, traditional and relevant.



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Huston Smith is internationally known and revered as the premier teacher of world religions. He is the focus of a five-part PBS television series with Bill Moyers and has taught at Washington University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Syracuse University, and the University of California at Berkeley. The recipient of twelve honorary degrees, Smith's fifteen books include his bestselling The World's Religions, Why Religion Matters, and his autobiography, Tales of Wonder.Read more



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‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie – Pieds-Noirs

‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie – Pieds-Noirs

Published by  Fiona Barclay at  January 17, 2020Categories Tags 

‘Oranîmes’ - Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie
Susan Slyomovics is Distinguished Professor in Anthropology at UCLA. She spent the autumn semester of 2019 in Marseille, researching a book on the afterlives of French colonial monuments. During this time she also reflected on previous time spent in both Nîmes and in Oran, urban centres linked by the presence of Notre-Dame de Santa Cruz. Here, she kindly shares details of her interactions with Pierre Claverie, the Bishop of Oran:


Between June 1990 and June 1992, I managed to spend as much time as possible in Oran on six successive Algerian cultural visas. Much of the time I stayed in the hostel attached to the Cathedral of Sainte-Marie, the seat of the diocese of Oran in El Maqqari (ex-St. Eugène). I owe my housing and much more to Pierre Claverie, who was the Bishop of Oran from 1981 until his assassination from a bomb placed near his car in 1996 that also took the life of his chauffeur, Mohamed Bouchikhi.

I can still hear his voice, literally, because I tape-recorded an initial interview and I continue to follow his writings. It took me decades to listen to him again and not without tears. I had given him my first draft in French of my 1995 article on the pilgrimage of the Virgin of Santa Cruz of Oran in Nîmes.* He had spoken to me of growing up in a « colonial bubble » (bulle coloniale), a topic he wrote about in letters to his family.** I had asked him about the « pied-noir » culture of Nîmes, since we both participated in the pilgrimage of the Virgin of Santa Cruz in the early 1990s during a time when attendance had peaked at over 100,000 pilgrims. The interview below has been edited and includes French transcription and my English translation. Since it occurred in Oran, the terms « here » (ici) and « there » (là-bas), as the pied-noir community usually deploys them, are reversed. Not « là-bas » for somewhere south over the Mediterranean Sea, but rather ici is « here » rooted in the space of Algeria.

‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie
Notre-Dame de Santa Cruz, Nîmes: Facing the war memorial, the Sanctuary space still not built up, 1991

‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie
Notre-Dame de Santa Cruz, Nîmes; Facing the landscaped Sanctuary, 2019

‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie
New structures to welcome pilgrims

Père Claverie : 
[It is very difficult to evaluate this pied-noir culture and how it is expressed. It is not a question that I asked myself […] It is no longer important for me here, it becomes so again when I am immersed in this universe which is mine and at the same time not mine. I feel certain affinities and I especially feel the immense suffering of people who did not understand anything, who suffered something even if they were violent actors in this drama, but who were completely alongside the real issues. What was happening to a generation of people who were in their thirties at the time of independence who are now sixty and who keep the same completely aberrant discourse about what they experienced, no notion of history not even a notion of cultural difference, since they erased them from their landscape. They do not accept when it is integrated, that is part of their conception of the world, for me it remains completely the colonial bubble that I knew in my childhood and which is not yet defeated, it hurts me to see people like that.]

Susan:  [Because maybe they think you have the same opinions and that you stayed here?]

Père Claverie: 
[That's it. For my part, I always try in my public speeches to emphasize the fact that there are Christians here and that it is important that there should be. The Christian presence is not only French and it is normal for Christians to live outside their Christian circle, these are the ideas that I develop.]

The significance of Ascension and Assumption

Père Claverie instructed me that Catholic teaching distinguishes between the Ascension of Jesus and the Assumption of Mary, while the pilgrimage of the Virgin of Santa Cruz of Oran is conducted in the name of the Ascension of Mary, a confusion and conflation of holy figures and doctrines. In 1950, Pope Pius XII issued a dogma of faith explicitly defining the doctrine of assumption in Munificentissimus Deus of November 1, 1950.*** This doctrine of Mary's Assumption clarifies that Jesus lifted Mary up to heaven:
Mary's body had been assumed into heaven along with her soul. … [Article 25] … out of filial love for his mother, Jesus Christ has willed that she be assumed into heaven. They base the strength of their proofs on the incomparable dignity of her divine motherhood and of all those prerogatives which follow from it. These include her exalted holiness, entirely surpassing the sanctity of all men and of the angels, the intimate union of Mary with her Son, and the affection of preeminent love which the Son has for his most worthy Mother.”
In contrast, the Ascension of Jesus refers to Jesus raising himself up while the Assumption of Mary is because Jesus raised her up. These doctrinal distinctions influence dates of the pilgrimage in the church calendar because Assumption and Ascension are held on different days. In other words, the Ascension of Jesus was transformed into the Ascension of Mary for the Catholic community originally in Oran and then brought with them to Nîmes. In a sense, this places the Nîmes pilgrimage as practised by the repatriates (rapatriés) from Oran, Algeria out of step with church doctrine, certainly since 1950, as for example in article 45 of the same 1950 doctrine of assumption:
Hence if anyone, which God forbid, should dare wilfully to deny or to call into doubt that which we have defined, let him know that he has fallen away completely from the divine and Catholic Faith.
As I report in my recent article, during Père Claverie’s tenure as Bishop of Oran from 1981-1996, this misalignment of Mary with Ascension Day instead of Assumption Day was “rectified in the 1980s by the Catholic Church of Algeria. Instead, the Virgin Mary was integrated into the local Oran diocesan masses that fell on Pentecost. In every way, the church in Algeria has undergone organizational, affective and spiritual transformations from triumphal colonialism to a church of witness and Muslim–Christian attempts at dialogue.”+
During the interview, Père Claverie speculated about changes to the Nîmes pilgrimage, some of which have in fact occurred after his untimely death. He believed that local church politics intended a slow eventual ‘integration’ of the repatriate community into the Catholic parishes of Nîmes. The pilgrimage of the Virgin of Santa Cruz as it existed in the 1980s and the 1990s was certain to be altered, if not diminished for the next generations. Already in addition to the Ascension Day pilgrimage held on May 29-30, 2019, the Sanctuary also celebrated the Assumption of the Virgin which took place on August 15, 2019 and included inhabitants of Nîmes with no attachments to Algeria. There have been even more transformations. As a result of security concerns, pilgrimages for several years have been confined to the actual perimeter of the Sanctuary guarded by a visible police presence. This means that the surrounding streets no longer host secular events. Given that pilgrim numbers have plummeted to approximately 8,000 in 2018 and 5,000 in 2019, what remains of the festive crowds, food stands, memorabilia, merchants, music, association meetings and reunions was easily moved within the Sanctuary grounds. Finally, anthropologist Dionigi Albera has documented the growth in the population surrounding the Nîmes Sanctuary, in particular the replacement of pieds-noirs by an influx of residents of Maghrebi Muslim background such that a new mosque was erected down the street from the Sanctuary of the Virgin Mary.++

‘Oranîmes’ – Susan Slyomovics’ interview with Pierre Claverie
Mosque of Al-Khalil
In our interview, Père Claverie returned to the early days of the original pilgrimage in Oran. Within the European settler colonial population in nineteenth-century Oran, there were cleavages between the French clergy and the predominantly Spanish worshippers that even their shared Catholic faith could not mask. These differences were reflected in the two statues of the Virgin Mary that reside on Mount Murdjajo : the Virgin on top of the Basilica made from the same mould as the Virgin Mary of Fourvières in Lyon and the smaller Spanish wooden statue of the Virgin Mary in the lower grotto that actually launched the first pilgrimage :

Père Claverie:


[This was a difficult event to interpret at its origin. It is the continuation which is important and a continuation was desired by the pieds-noirs to establish in Oran a place of non-Algerian authenticity : We are here, we carry with us our faith, our almost divine legitimacy over this territory and this statue which is here is a Spanish Virgin. I'm talking about the Virgin of the miracle, where we meet precisely all the opposition and recuperation about the entire popular religious legitimacy which is Spanish and which derives its symbols, its religious practice from Spain with the pilgrimage, like chickpeas in the shoes and all that was really characteristic. And on the other side, the hierarchy of the church which wanted to perpetuate this pilgrimage, gave it French legitimacy with all the opposition that ran throughout the colonial period between the Spanish church and the French church and the French state which required the French church to make French the Spanish church and the Spanish population. So the recuperation by Our Lady of Fourvière of Lyon is weighty. It is also the legitimacy of the state that almost imposed itself on the popular legitimacy. It remained a popular manifestation and they resettled in France with their Spanish symbol, because when you look at all that there is in the surrounding sanctuary.]

By 'all that there is', Père Claverie was referencing the astounding accretion of statues and associated religious artifacts brought or donated to Nîmes drawn from churches throughout the three former French Algerian provinces of Oran, Algiers, and Constantine as well as replicas fabricated locally to replace those remaining objects that the pieds-noirs left behind in Algeria. Such complex movements of statues, church bells, war memorials, and archives are the subject of my next book project.

NOTES
* Susan Slyomovics, “Algeria Elsewhere: The Pilgrimage of the Virgin of Santa Cruz in Oran, Algeria and Nimes, France,” in Folklore Interpreted: Essays in Honor of Alan Dundes, edited by Regina Bendix and Rosemary Levy Zumwalt, 337-354 (New York: Garland Press, 1995).
** Pierre Claverie, Là où se posent les vraies questions: Lettres familiales 1975-1981 (Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf, 2012).
*** The apostolic constitution is available on the Vatican website at http://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xii/en/apost_constitutions/documents/hf_p-xii_apc_19501101_munificentissimus-deus.html
+ Susan Slyomovics, “The Virgin Mary of Algeria: French Mediterraneans En Miroir.” Special issue: Remapping Mediterranean Anthropology, edited by Naor Ben-Yehoyada, Heath Cabot, and Paul A. Silverstein, History and Anthropology, in press for printed copy. Online pre-publication link: https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2019.1684912
++ Dionigi Albera and Jean-François Robert, La Vierge d’Oran et la Mosqué d’Abraham. DVD. Directed by Dionigi Albera and Jean-François Robert (Aix-en-Provence: IDEMEC, 2009); and Dionigi Albera,“The Virgin Mary, the Sanctuary and the Mosque: Interfaith Coexistence at a Pilgrimage Centre,” in Gender, Nation and Religion in European Pilgrimage, edited by Catrien Notermans, 193–208 (London: Routledge, 2012).

Susan Slomovics
Marseille, December 2019
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Unity | New Religious Movement & Spiritual Teachings | Britannica

Unity | New Religious Movement & Spiritual Teachings | Britannica

Unity
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Unity, new religious movement founded in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1889 by Charles Fillmore (1854–1948), a real-estate agent, and his wife, Myrtle (1845–1931). Mrs. Fillmore believed that spiritual healing had cured her of tuberculosis. As a result, the Fillmores began studying spiritual healing. They were deeply influenced by Emma Curtis Hopkins, a former follower of Mary Baker Eddy, who founded Christian Science

Unity, however, is closer to New Thought, which in general emphasizes the primacy of mind and spiritual healing, than it is to Christian Science. 
Until 1922 it was a member of the International New Thought Alliance.

Unity developed gradually as the Fillmores attempted to share their insights concerning religion and spiritual healing. They began publishing magazines, books, and pamphlets and started the service known as Silent Unity, which, through prayer and counselling, helps people by telephone, via mail, and online. As the work and the number of employees increased, Unity moved several times within Kansas City. 

After World War I, the Fillmores began developing Unity Village, 15 miles from Kansas City and eventually covering 1,400 acres, and by 1949 all departments of Unity were located there. After Charles Fillmore’s death, Unity was led by the Fillmores’ sons and grandchildren.

From Unity Village a variety of activities are carried on. The publishing operation produces books, pamphlets, and periodicals, including the bimonthly Unity Magazine and the Daily Word, which is available in both print and online formats. 

The staff of Silent Unity is available day and night to aid people through counseling and prayer. It has been reported that as many as two million requests for aid are received by Silent Unity each year. All are answered by mail or by telephone free of charge, but many persons who make requests give a contribution. Unity also conducts classes for interested individuals and a course of study for those who wish to become Unity ministers and teachers at Unity retreats held at Unity Village.


Although Unity prefers to consider itself a nonsectarian educational institution that attempts to teach religious truth, it has essentially become a denomination. Unity ministers must complete a prescribed course of study and be approved by the Association of Unity Churches.

Unity emphasizes spiritual healing, prosperity, and practical Christianity. 
Unlike some groups that arose out of New Thought, it stresses its agreements with traditional Christianity. 
Sin, illness, the world, and matter are considered real and material, in contrast to the doctrines of Christian Science, but illnesses are considered unnatural and curable by spiritual means. The practice of medicine, however, is not rejected. There is no definite creed, although a statement written by Charles Fillmore, the “Unity Statement of Faith,” is available in a pamphlet. Unity is tolerant of the beliefs and practices of others.


Official statistics are difficult to interpret, because the movement is interdenominational and international, but the Unity movement is thought to reach some six million persons, most of whom, however, are not members. 
Its influence extends far beyond the membership.

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Myrtle Page Fillmore

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Myrtle Page Fillmore
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Also known as: Mary Caroline Page
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Category: History & SocietyBorn: August 6, 1845 Ohio (Birthday in 5 days)Died: October 6, 1931 (aged 86) MissouriFounder: “Unity”
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Myrtle Page Fillmore, original name Mary Caroline Page, (born August 6, 1845, Pagetown, Ohio, U.S.—died October 6, 1931, Lee’s Summit, Missouri), American religious leader who, with her husband, founded Unity, a new religious movement that propounded a pragmatic healing and problem-solving faith.



Mary Caroline Page, who later took the name Myrtle, grew up in a strict Methodist home. After a year at Oberlin College (1868–69), she became a schoolteacher in Clinton, Missouri, and then in Dennison, Texas. In Dennison she met Charles Fillmore, whom she married in 1881. She suffered from incipient tuberculosis but could find no relief in orthodox medical treatment. In 1886 she turned to mental healing as described in a series of lectures by E.B. Weeks, a student of the ex-Christian Scientist Emma Curtis Hopkins. Fillmore found her health greatly improving. Her husband, skeptical at first, soon joined in her enthusiasm as he found his leg, which had been stunted and weak since a childhood accident, growing stronger. They resolved to devote themselves to evangelizing for “practical Christianity,” an active faith able to effect solutions to physical, mental, financial, and other problems.


In 1889 they began publication of a magazine called Modern Thought (after 1895 called Unity). In 1893 they began publishing a second magazine, Wee Wisdom, for children. In 1890 they organized the Society of Silent Unity, which offered the service of effective prayer on behalf of beset persons who wrote to request it. Though it was not their intention, the organizational structure came to closely resemble that of a denomination, with a training school turning out ministers and with hundreds of separate Unity “churches” throughout the Midwest and in California. A basic text, Lessons in Truth, was published in 1908 by one of their most influential converts, Harriette Emilie Cady of New York City, a former homeopathist.


Unity grew rapidly, and after World War I the Fillmores built a permanent home for the movement at Lee’s Summit. After Myrtle Fillmore’s death, Unity continued to prosper under her husband, who was succeeded in turn by their sons.This article was most recently revised and updated by Matt Stefon.

Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul: 30 Stories of Interspiritual Discovery in the Community of Faiths - Teasdale, Brother Wayne, Howard MD, Martha, Borysenko PH D, Joan | 9781681629827 | Amazon.com.au | Books

Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul: 30 Stories of Interspiritual Discovery in the Community of Faiths - Teasdale, Brother Wayne, Howard MD, Martha, Borysenko PH D, Joan | 9781681629827 | Amazon.com.au | Books





Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul: 30 Stories of Interspiritual Discovery in the Community of Faiths Paperback – 1 June 2004
by Brother Wayne Teasdale (Editor), Martha Howard MD (Editor), & 1 more
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Contributors from many faiths, ages and backgrounds tell how they learned to integrate the spirit into their daily lives and the remarkable transformations that followed.



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In Aquil Charlton's essay, "Sacred Story," she says, "Hearing the beliefs of others helps tune our ears to the sound of God being evoked in our presence. We can listen to the plights of others for familiar stepping stones and stumbling blocks that remind us of our own path." Isn't this the very gift we bring to bear in spiritual direction? We tune our ears and our hearts to the sound of God being evoked through the directee's sharing. This book, consisting of thirty individual stories, was gathered over the past four years by Teasdale, a Catholic lay monk, and Howard, a medical doctor and practicing Buddhist. As members of the Council for a Parliament of the world Religions' Spiritual Life Circle, they sought "to come to terrns with the value and effectiveness of spirituality across religions and cultures" and "to inquire into what works in all forms of the spiritual life to open minds, expand hearts, and transform lives into radiant examples of compassion, kindness and love-in-action."

This collection, written by people whose lives often reflect openness to more than one tradition (Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim, Jew) is effective and engaging. While some may find this a "mixed bag" in spiritual sophistication, that is what I found most captivating. This is a valuable resource for our culture, with so many seeking personal growth in spirituality. In a short space, readers can enjoy a range of spiritual experiences that challenge, inspire, and awe.

Russill Paul's essay helps us move into a greater understanding of interspirituality, a "both-and" experience in the spiritual realm. Paul offers a well-developed commentary on interspirituality, understood as the next wave of consciousness. He presents qualitative distinctions important for understanding interspirituality-its benefits and challenges. He observes, "the fear of interspirituality, which is the fear of globalizarion, is reflective of the most basic fear we all have: Will any semblance of our own lives and impressions remain when we merge with the Divine at death?" He continues, "Through an emerging global awareness, the Divine is showing us that our identity is not lost but merges with all things."

These stories invite us in-tolisten, to reflect, to make connections-and spiritual directors will find numerous uses for them. I can note five. For personal reflection to encounter a wide variety of stories reflecting various religious paths leading to a transformative, often mystical, experience of awakening to new insights, new commitments, new realities. For understanding diverse generations, especially generations different from the director's own. For encountering religious traditions and blends, which will stretch many directors focused in one tradition within their practice. For directees, as stories for spiritual reading. For spiritual growth groups, to invite members to share their own stories.

What I found myself wanting as I read the book was a biographical note for each seeker. Having connected with them at a spiritual level, I wanted to know more. That being said, I recommend this text as a valuable compendium, fostering the hope that our current generation welcomes a resurgence of the mystical tradition in its many manifestations. This is the hope we base our ministry of direction upon, and the Hope we serve.
About the Author


Wayne Teasdale was a lay monk and best-selling author of The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World's Religions; Bede Griffiths: An Introduction to His Interspiritual Thought and A Monk in the World. As a member of the Bede Griffiths International Trust, Teasdale was an adjunct professor at DePaul University, Columbia College, and the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. Wayne Teasdale was coeditor of Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul: 30 Stories of Interspiritual Discovery.



Martha Howard, MD, is a pioneer in the field of integrative medicine, which she has practiced since 1982. She is medical director of Wellness Associates of Chicago, and author of the Power of Suggestion CD series. A practicing Buddhist, she is active in the interfaith and peace movements, and is a producing partner of a documentary film in development, Journey to Peace.



Joan Borysenko, PhD, is a respected scientist, gifted therapist and unabashed mystic. Trained at Harvard Medical School, she was an instructor in medicine until 1988. Currently the president of Mind/Body Health Sciences, Inc., she is an internationally known speaker and consultant in women's health and spirituality, integrative medicine and the mind/body connection. She is the author of nine books, including the New York Times bestsellers Minding the Body, Mending the Mind; A Woman's Book of Life; 7 Paths to God; The Power of the Mind to Heal and Inner Peace for Busy People.

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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Skylight Paths Publishing; 1st edition (1 June 2004)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 224 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1681629828
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1681629827
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B. Marold
3.0 out of 5 stars A lightweight book. Informative, with no agenda to push.Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 19 December 2011
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Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul, edited by Brother Wayne Teasdale and Martha Howard.

This gives me the rare opportunity to offer a review which may reply to the comments offered by one of my classmates, who happened to have this book as a text in a class we shared.

Very briefly, the title and subtitle tell the story. It has thumbnail spiritual biographies of thirty individuals with several different starting points, primarily from Christianity (especially Protestant), Judaism, and Islam, who are dissatisfied with their spiritual traditions, or lack of spiritual tradition, in which they have grown up. None of the subjects have formal training (No Thomas Mertons here) and almost all depend on the guidance which good fortune may have brought their way. The result is what many of us have seen in our friends. The first place people go when they are dissatisfied or disillusioned is outside their own faith. (The book does not discuss those whose endpoint is non-spiritual agnosticism or athiesm).

There is a certain sense of serendipity in the choice of studies. By that I mean there seems to be virtually no plan to how the stories were selected. Of course, we do not see what stories went into their shredder, but there is no perceptible intention to single out a certain point of origin, destination, or method of making the journey. And, if you are writing in contemporary America, you are more likely to find Protestants who feel the need for spiritual renewal than Catholics, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, or whatever. And, if you turn from Protestantism, your first choice is not likely to be either Catholicism or Judaism. It is likely to be either Islam, because that is a common choice, or Buddhism, which is the religious inclination best known for its spirituality. It is also a not uncommon phenomenon for those who begin life in a Biblical literalist community to become disenchanted. One famous example is Bart Ehrman, who is one of the leading Biblical scholars, and who is now an agnostic, because of difficulties in resoling scripture with the world.

This is because a fundamentalist belief requires a far more sophisticalted understanding of the Bible than the average Protestant or Catholic has. While one of Luther's main tenants was study of the Bible, most Lutherans skate by on the 20 minutes they get in the sermon each week, if they are lucky. One of the strengths of Judaism is that it fosters deep bibical study among its members.

Because the approach of this book is so ecumenical, it is probably of little value to the average reader, unless you happen to have a career interest in pastoral counciling. It's purpose is to uncritically present as wide a range of journeys of spiritual discovery as one is likely to encounter at the local library or laundramat. Thus, it had some value as a text on that subject.
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Y. Gowell
3.0 out of 5 stars Awakening the Spirit, Inspiring the Soul: 30 Stories of Interspiritual DiscoveryReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 19 August 2011
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The stories are mini-autobiographies, showing how people came to faith in a variety of faiths. I enjoyed the book - but it required some deep thinking about new ideas.

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A Christian Vedanta - Bede Griffiths and The Hindu-Christian Encounter | PDF | Advaita Vedanta | Vedanta

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A Way to God by Matthew Fox - Ebook | Scribd

A Way to God by Matthew Fox - Ebook | Scribd



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A Way to God: Thomas Merton's Creation Spirituality Journey


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This unique reflection was prompted by an invitation Matthew Fox received to speak on the centennial of Thomas Merton’s birth. Fox says that much of the trouble he’s gotten into — such as being excommunicated in 1993 from the Dominican Order by Cardinal Ratzinger (who later became Pope Benedict) — was because of Thomas Merton, who sent Fox to Paris to complete a doctoral program in philosophy. Fox found that Merton’s journals, poetry, and religious writings revealed a deeply ecumenical philosophy and a contemplative life experience similar to that of Meister Eckhart, the fourteenth-century mystic/theologian who inspired Fox’s own “creation spirituality.” It is little surprise to find Fox and Merton to be kindred spirits, but the intersections Fox finds with Eckhart are intellectually profound, spiritually enlightening, and delightfully engaging.
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Interfaith Dialogue and Comparative Theology: A Theoretical Approach to a Practical Dilemma

Interfaith Dialogue and Comparative Theology: A Theoretical Approach to a Practical Dilemma


The Journal of Social Encounters 
 
Volume 3 
Issue 1 Special Issue: Religion, Politics, and Article 8 Peacemaking 
 
2019 
Interfaith Dialogue and Comparative Theology: A Theoretical Approach to a Practical Dilemma 
Michael Atkinson 
LaTrobe University 

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/social_encounters 
  Part of the Comparative Methodologies and Theories Commons, Other Religion Commons, Peace and 
Conflict Studies Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons 
 
Recommended Citation 
Atkinson, Michael (2019) "Interfaith Dialogue and Comparative Theology: A Theoretical Approach to a Practical Dilemma," The Journal of Social Encounters: Vol. 3: Iss. 1, 47-57. 
Available at: https://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/social_encounters/vol3/iss1/8 
This Additional Essay is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@CSB/SJU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Journal of Social Encounters by an authorized editor of DigitalCommons@CSB/SJU. For more information, please contact digitalcommons@csbsju.edu. 
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Interfaith Dialogue and Comparative Theology: 
A Theoretical Approach to a Practical Dilemma 
 
Michael Atkinson  
LaTrobe University 
 
Interfaith dialogue is based on the premise that there is more that unites than divides us.  Epistemological humility, acceptance of religious plurality or the need for unity itself have all been presented as unifying pathways across disparate religious traditions.  Despite such approaches, conceptual understandings of interfaith dialogue have not kept pace with practice. This theoretical paper argues that interfaith dialogical theory profits from a deep understanding of moral psychology and social learning theory.  The former posits that a sense 
of ‘fairness’ and ‘universal care’ are aligned with religious acceptance.  On the other hand, values of sanctity, loyalty and authority promote a sense of religious conservatism thereby hindering liberal ideals around plurality and acceptance. The latter suggests that it is first and foremost the exploration of difference, not similarity, which provides the tension to question our preconceived moral values and constructions and thereby move to more inclusive ones. Through contextualising these theories within the reflective spaces at the borders of interfaith dialogue, this paper suggests that bridging difference does not lie in making religious comparisons but rather in accepting religious ambiguity in pursuit of truth. The burgeoning area of comparative theology offers both theoretical and practical guidance for embracing religious diversity in a multi-religious world.  
 
Introduction 
The contemporary world is religiously diverse. Different cultures and religions intermingle. This raises important social as well as theological questions. Does only one religious tradition contain insight into truth or do all? Can we learn from other traditions or should we hold our own religious tradition is complete in our relationship with the divine? This paper explores these questions within the broader context of interfaith dialogue and the need to add conceptual clarity around its understanding and practice.  
 
A guiding principle of interfaith dialogue, as Leonard Swidler, Professor of Catholic Thought and Interreligious Dialogue at Temple University claims, is ‘for each participant to learn from the other so that s/he can change and grow’ (2013). Defined more broadly in terms of the purposeful interaction between members of different religious groups to promote mutual understanding, interfaith dialogue has garnered high profile support. Programs delivered by secular organisations as diverse as the World Bank, the Anna Lindh Foundation and UNESCO has ensured that interfaith dialogue has entered the language of contemporary society in the form of international partnerships, cross-cultural exchanges and sustainable social development.  It is a key aspect of the U.N. International Decade for the Rapprochement of Cultures (2013-2022), an important focus of the educational work of the Anna Lindh 
Foundation (Volpi 2008) and a part of the World Bank’s policy of fighting poverty (Marshall & Saanen 2007).   Alongside the establishment on the world stage of centres working internationally for the advancement of interfaith dialogue, there is also a proposal for an interfaith council at the UN. In the context of a world in which religious- based difference is seen as a threat, interfaith dialogue is viewed as a potential harmonising and accommodating framework to support unity within the diversity of humankind. 
  
 
Interfaith dialogue may be a practice whose time has come but it is also one which faces many challenges. Beyond a reconciliatory focus, there are multiple areas of uncertainty surrounding its implementation. At present the field is characterised by diversity in understandings of dialogue (Fletcher 2013), disciplinary basis (Neufeldt 2011) and theoretical orientation. Such divergences have contributed to an identified need to develop a robust theoretical basis for interfaith dialogue. As Marianne Moyaert argues ‘we are at the level of practice, of encounter and action, and not at the level of theory’ (2013 p 204).    
 
This does not mean that the field of interfaith dialogue is lacking in conceptual thought. The broad area of dialogue has a deep theoretical basis. Likewise, the discipline of comparative theology has both a strong dialogical and theoretical orientation.   Interestingly both these areas foreground the problem of bias and the learning required to bridge such bias.  Despite this however there has been a significant scholarly absence to exploring the connection between interfaith dialogue, social learning and religious based bias.  
 
This paper addresses this void.  It looks initially at the work of diverse dialogue scholars as well as the burgeoning discipline of comparative theology.  It then explores both the notion of implicit bias and social learning within the interfaith space to suggest a theoretical framework for interfaith dialogue.   The central message, utilising a principle of comparative theology, is that the dialogue path is not simply about peace and harmony but also an inner journey in how we view difference. The paper ends by exploring interfaith dialogical approaches to answer the two questions stated above. 
 
Dialogue 
Direct meanings of dialogue can differ depending upon one’s perspective. Most approaches to dialogue however hold close to a social constructivist understanding of reality. From a social constructivist position, truth is emergent and made in interaction, rather than given, eschewing singular perspectives which are partial and limited (Kim & Kim 2008). In this regard, dialogue represents the quintessential form of constructivist communication, deriving meaning through engaging with difference for the purpose of sharing and constructing new cultural meanings (Escobar 2009).  It moves beyond expressions of religious diversity and mutual understanding to the creation of something new, together (Platform for Intercultural Europe & Culture Action Europe 2010).  In requiring us to challenge, question and to reflect upon our own meanings and to ethically question the meanings of others, it demands a spirit of inquiry rather than advocacy in the knowledge that no singular religious group has a monopoly on truth. As a consequence, new knowledge is at once purposely constructed and idiosyncratic in what may broadly be defined as a continual learning process. A central aim, thereby, is not simply communication but also the creation of an ethical, humanitarian space where dissention and difference may be expressed to thereby stimulate collective, creative expressions through reciprocal inquiry.  
 
Notions of dialogue, in the form of discussion between master and student, may be identified in the early Hindu classical literature of India and in the Ch’an Buddhist literature of China (Besley and Peters 2011). It is the Greek philosopher Socrates, however, known chiefly through the writings of his student Plato, who has been the key influential historical figure on dialogue in modern western civilisation. His works, which focussed on rational debate and an ethical engagement with the other, served as an inspirational source for academic debate as the nature of conversational exchanges became once more a focus of academic attention from the early 20th century onwards (Rule 2004).   
The existential philosopher Martin Buber (1965), together with the hermeneutic philosophy of Hans Georg Gadamer (1989), the reciprocity of Bakhtin (1984) and to a lesser extent the rational re-constructionism of Jürgen Habermas (1984) have become synonymous with the concept of dialogue through their studies on what may be termed ‘ethical communication’.  Others may be added to this list.  Paulo Freire, who has been hugely influential in the area of pedagogy and human development through his critical orientation to dialogue and David Bohm, who sees in dialogue a vehicle to human consciousness, are two such figures. Aligned with social constructivism, each of these scholars foreground dialogue as a phenomenon of cocreation and tension (Stewart & Zediker 2000).   
 
These scholars have also been instrumental in the emerging area of interfaith theory. Keaton and Soukup (2009) have proposed a pluralistic conceptualization of interfaith dialogue based on Bakhtin’s work, highlighting the reciprocity and mutuality between stakeholders while paying attention to ontology and the social context.   Abu Nimer (1999) has applied conflict resolution theory to interreligious settings drawing on the work of peace activist John Paul Lederach (1995) who in turn drew on Paulo Freire’s critical approach to dialogue. Marianne Moyaert (2013) offers a hermeneutical theory for interreligious dialogue deriving inspiration through the work of Paul Ricoeur.  Paul Ricoeur, in turn, is frequently compared to Gadamer’s own hermeneutic interreligious positioning. 
 
An important point is that each dialogue scholar views dialogue through a different prism (Besley and Peters 2011) and is seen to be applicable to different areas of the human experience. Habermas, as an example, is particularly suitable for exploring rational deliberation within the dialogical space. Buber on the other hand, holds to a more reflective focus, while Freire has an andragogical orientation.  This does not mean that understandings of dialogue need be constructed around the ideas of a single scholar. Nor does it mean that a given orientation to dialogue is suitable only for certain social contexts. It does indicate however that the lens through which we look can only ever be incomplete; an interpretation of reality rather than reality itself.   
 
As such there is a need to be transparent with regards to the orientation we take to dialogue.  
Given the orientation of this paper in promoting the centrality of learning to interfaith dialogue, I find the work of Freire and to a lesser extent Buber and Bohm to be particularly useful.  As I discuss in greater detail below, these three dialogue scholars engage deeply in the social learning processes so evident in interfaith dialogue itself. 
 
Social learning and dialogue 
Freire (1970) shares the viewpoint that every dialogical encounter exists within a complex of social reality as participants themselves choose to see it. Social learning theory suggests that participation in a learning environment evolves from our aspirations to be part of, develop and negotiate our own sense of identity.  In this regard the creation of knowledge is always a socially and morally situated practice.  For Freire, non-coercive, open-ended and reciprocal dialogue activates the creative mind and thereby frees it, enabling those who feel silenced to vocalise their needs and aspirations. Freire utilises the term ‘oppressed’ for people whose voices are limited for diverse reasons and through diverse means.  In doing so he brings into the dialogue space the concept of power and voice both external and internal to the individual.  Although Freire’s focus is on social class, I would argue that his ideas could be transferred to any social based construction of difference inclusive of the interfaith encounter. 
Of particular note is that Freire positions dialogue as a struggle which  is both external, between individuals and internal, within individuals; a struggle of engagement with what makes us distinctly human while under the realization ‘that we can only ever become more fully human’ (Roberts 2005 p.136). Critical reflection and the recognition of the human within the other is an essential aspect of this process. In other words, dialogue, along the lines of Freire’s understanding, is a never-ending action as people grapple with difficult, complex processes arriving at unfinished places in a journey of both discovery and of humanizing change.  
 
Buber (1970) extends the reflective lens beyond actual vocal conversation to include the silent spaces within, either in communion with another, or in communion with oneself. As Buber notes: 
A dialogical relation will show itself ... in genuine conversation, but it is not composed of this. Not only is the shared silence of two such persons a dialogue, but also their dialogical life continues, even when they are separated in space, as the continual potential presence of the one to the other, as an unexpressed intercourse (1970 p. 125). 
 
Buber (1970), in contrast to Freire, sees the dialogic relationship in terms of a concrete and life-enhancing possibility born by understanding one another in a spirit of authenticity through everyday life (Stewart and Zediker, 2009). Such a perspective brings into question where dialogue begins and ends as well as the nature of such dialogue and the importance of silence. Buber would argue that dialogue continues beyond conversation into the silent reflections of oneself.  
 
Bohm (1996), by further contrast, charges that each person has a set of absolute meanings that they cannot readily move away from.  From a Bohmian point of view, an important function of dialogue is to reveal these meanings so that they may be explored and the assumptions uncovered. Through learning how to dissociate themselves from their reified thoughts, according to Bohm, people can thereby develop a different relationship with both their reasoning and emotional processes and how they come to know those processes. As a consequence, Bohmian dialogue is concerned with meaning and assumption alongside the generation and the questioning of abstract generalisations about one’s own identity and the identities of others.  
 
Collectively Friere, Buber and Bohm present a learning-based understanding of dialogue inclusive of the socio-cultural context (Freire), deep personal reflection and mutuality (Buber) and the acknowledgement of meaning (Bohm).  Each presents a pathway to positive change emphasizing the importance of critical understanding (Freire), communion (Buber) and suspension of thought (Bohm).  As they warn us however, the journey to change is never easy for it requires us to come face to face with our own fears (Freire), assumptions (Bohm) and incomplete sense of humanity (Buber). In short, it demands that we understand the bias within. 
 
Implicit bias 
At the heart of interfaith dialogue lies a core paradox. Religions promote a singular construction of truth, based on a doctrinal view to reality.  This serves to both include others within the embrace of all humankind, while excluding others on the basis that they have a misplaced perception of truth.  The result is a selective, circumscribed religious narrative.  The narrative we live by is fundamentally an exclusive one.  We cannot, at the same time be a pagan and a Christian; a Buddhist and a Muslim; a Protestant and a Catholic. 
The power of tradition and our social context to inform and dictate the limits of our viewpoints is a recurring point made by dialogue scholars. Our cultural ‘horizon’, according to Gadamer (1989, p.304-306), is one frequently mired in ignorance and prejudice about both ourselves and the other ensuring that we cannot readily move beyond that which we have already conceived of as ‘truth’. Consequently, many of our assumptions are so closely tied to our sense of identity that we cannot resist defending them (Bohm 1996, p.10).   Rather we choose an oppressive, inauthentic and monologic form of communication (Buber 1965) that, ‘at its extreme, denies the existence outside itself of another consciousness with equal rights and equal responsibilities’ (Bakhtin 1984, p.292). At issue is that we, as human beings, are hard wired according to our moral philosophy. Our religious bias is so ingrained, deep set and tied to our sense of identity that we act through our deep-seated emotions rather than rational thought.   
 
As social psychologist Jonathan Haidt (2016), argues, our moral philosophy exists on a spectrum. People who strongly identify with a singular narrative believe that their religion is clearly defined, clearly bordered and ordained. They feel a bond with their faith and believe that this bond imposes moral obligations. Morals around loyalty, authority and sanctity are binding and important (Haidt, 2016 ). At the other end are the more cosmopolitan minded.  Such people are comfortable with both religious diversity and religious ambiguity.  They are inclined to identify with universal values where fairness and protection from harm are of higher value than authority, loyalty and sanctity.   
 
While people at the extremes of this spectrum show dramatic differences from each other, many of us sit in the middle. The result is different discourses applied to the other. An orientation based on exclusion acts to legitimise a singular faith (thereby denying legitimacy to other faiths), by claiming a sense of moral authority on truth.  A second, related discourse is that of deficit.  It works on the assumption that ‘the other faith’ is inadequate, deficient or incomplete, lacking in fundamental understanding that puts it in deficit to one’s own faith.  A third category acknowledges the legitimacy and value of the other faith, but only in a limited extent thereby negating the need for reflection or questioning of one’s own beliefs. The fourth aspect draws on notions of universal humanity, compassion and respect to bridge the sense of constructed difference between one’s own faith and that of the other. In so doing it also widens debate on questions of truth, identity and power.  
 
Dialogue demands that we value the other, not because it confirms our sense of identity, but rather challenges us to question who we are.  In other words, it shifts us towards humanitarian viewpoints. Discarding the notion of an exclusive singular truth, embedded in a complex nexus of values and priorities is deeply challenging, however.  It is this space of challenge in the plural religious landscape that comparative theology offers a unique way of interacting with the challenge of otherness. 
 
Comparative theology  
Comparative theology aims to deepen our understanding of religious truth through encounter with religious difference. Professor Francis Clooney, at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts positions comparative theology as ‘a journey in faith’. 
 
If it is theology, deep learning across religious borders, it will always be a journey in faith. It will be from, for, and about God, whose grace keeps making room for all of us as we find our way faithfully in a world of religious diversity (2011 p 165).  
While rooted in one’s own faith, comparative theology views religious diversity as a pathway and mechanism for knowing God better.  Arvind Sharma, Birks Professor of Comparative 
Religion at McGill University, presents his approach to religious difference from a similar ethos.  Sharma’s concept of reciprocal illumination embodies the idea that something in another religious tradition may enrich our understanding of our own religious tradition.  As he notes what if one compares things not in order to judge one item in terms of another, but to see how our understanding of the items themselves is enhanced in the process… (Sharma, 2005, p 246). 
 
Arvind Sharma is circumspect with how much we can learn about the other.  As he notes, our understanding is always framed by our own limited experiences.  Only by converting to another point of view can we truly understand their world. Sharma indicates however that we do not have to enter the world of the other.  Rather, the point is to be challenged by the other. In seeking difference, we can extend our understanding of ourselves and thereby realise ‘that apparently different phenomena may also unexpectedly shed similar light’ (Sharma, p 254).   Sharma and Clooney have added an important element to understandings of interfaith dialogue demanding that we see beyond our own preconceived perceptions in order to understand our moral bias. The focus on difference, on learning and on change enables us to view the religious other not as a challenge to our deep-set feelings about our self but as a resource to enable us to explore the mysteries within.  It is this space of difference, learning and change that are essential elements for a theoretical framework of interfaith dialogue from a learning-based perspective.    
 
An interfaith framework 
I have constructed an interfaith framework according to three principles a) recognition of difference, b) learning across difference and c) transformation. In order to explain this framework, I layout each facet and contextualise it with examples from comparative theology in the context of the two questions in the opening paragraph of the introduction; repeated here. 
Does only one religious tradition contain insight into truth or do all?  Can we learn from other traditions or should we hold that our own religious tradition is complete in our journey in our relationship with the divine? 
 
a) Recognition of difference 
Interfaith dialogue takes place in a space of moral tension where identities of both the self and the other are transitive, imagined, self-ascribed and imposed. 
 
Rabbi Erik H Yoffie (2011) makes the point that meaningful dialogue happens when the conversation turns to our religious differences. … when we recognize that absent a clear affirmation of who we are, how we are different and what we truly believe, all our conversations are likely to come to nothing. 
 
A key challenge in Yoffie’s quote is to truly understand the complexity of who we are. It is far easier to refer to both ourselves and to others through the labels we construct.  Anita Ray, Honorary Fellow in the Centre for Inter-religious Dialogue, Faculty of Theology and Philosophy at Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, gives a very good example of such imposed labels applied to the positioning of Australian Aboriginal people. 
Indigenous Australian peoples have been contained within categories that non-Indigenous people have constructed for them. The power-holders in Australia have told them who they are and have scripted their roles, attempting to homogenize them (Ray, 2014, p 64) 
 
Power, categorization and homogenisation are three elements that Ray points to which place the ‘other’ in deficit.   
 
Unfortunately, it is often far easier to relate to the ‘Christian’, the ‘Muslim’ or the ‘pagan’ through the labels we apply to these categories than the people themselves.  As Clooney argues however (2011 n.p.), ‘we should be increasingly reluctant to confuse the necessary shorthand claims we make about religions…with the full, adequate account of those traditions’. The recognition of difference goes far beyond the labels and categories we place on others (and on ourselves).  Rather it is embedded in the moral pursuit of our experiences and in valuing the experiences of others. Recognizing our propensity to categorize and replace experience with labels enables us to navigate our assumptions and judgements from a position of vulnerability.  The following statement, by Paul F. Knitter, Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World Religions and Culture at Union Theological Seminary, New York (2013 p 15) offers insight into the difference between experience and the potential emptiness of words that so often we use to replace experience. 
 
“God” must be an experience before “God” can be a word. Unless God is an experience, whatever words we might use for the Divine will be without content, like road signs pointing nowhere, like lightbulbs without electricity. 
Buddha would warn Christians…: if you want to use words for God, make sure that these words are preceded by, or at least coming out of, an experience that is your own. 
 
As such, before we can begin to understand the Muslim, the Buddhist, the Jew we must experience what these labels mean from their perspective, not our own.  So often however we see the other with our bias, not our discernment.   
 
Shifting our viewpoint to ‘experience’ rather than the words which describe experience and the labels we apply to otherness enables us to extend our sense of religious identity. From this perspective Knitter makes a profound point in reference to his ‘practice’ of learning from Buddhists.  As Knitter notes (2013, p 155) Buddhists are good at 
 
Unitive experiences in which the self is so transformed that it finds itself through losing itself. And that’s where I believe Christians can learn a lot from Buddhists.  By watching how Buddhists go about achieving their 
‘goals’, Christians can better ’come home’ to their own. 
 
Knitter emphasizes a dimension of faith structured on seeking truth in preference to identifying with defined, constructed and absolute meanings. Coming from a position that questions religious sanctity to favour the individual right to learn, Knitter eschews the moral authority and loyalty of singular religious doctrine to prioritise universal moral fairness. In other words, difference between religions is not in the labels applied to certain groups but in the journey towards evocative questions and nuanced answers (Steinkerchner 2011). 
 
 
b) Learning across difference  
An exploration and negotiation of meanings, objects or aspects of the self through participative structures that affirm and extend a person’s sense of belonging and identity to a more inclusive group through the considered construction of a shared vision, a shared practice or a shared goal. 
 
The theoretical framework of interfaith dialogue constructed above indicates that it is not just recognizing difference that is important but also in bridging difference.  A learning-based approach to dialogue, which highlights the creation of meanings in the vicinity of a wider discourse on reality, brings into focus not just difference but the bridging of difference.  Creating a learning space supporting a more inclusive sense of identity, requires us to identify beyond that which divides us to points of difference we can learn from. 
 
Believers, regardless of one’s religion, are seekers of truth. Haidt (2012) indicates that the pursuit of truth can bring people together who normally would be opposed to each other.  Religious truth however, is always mysterious and elusive. As comparative theologian Scott Steinkerchner argues, ‘None of us individually, nor all of us collectively, possess a complete understanding of our faith. That fullness of truth lies forever in the future’ (2011, p. 149).  
 
The answer to the guiding question of this paper lies is whether we feel comfortable in recognizing the value other religious traditions hold for us in our pursuit of the divine. In a world which traditionally has favoured a singular religious identity, cultural plurality is suggestive that we can no longer treat ‘the other’ as entirely separate from ourselves. What becomes interesting is the moral framework that underpins our positions and thereby how we approach otherness.  
 
Above I argued that we, as individuals have a choice with regards to our moral outlook on reality.  People who identify with a singular narrative, who believe that their religion is clearly defined, clearly bordered and ordained are more likely to base their morality on loyalty, authority and sanctity. By contrast, the more cosmopolitan minded are inclined to prioritise fairness and protection from harm over authority, loyalty and sanctity.  The result is different discourses, and biased understandings of otherness.  
 
Comparative theologians challenge such moral frameworks by practicing a form of deep learning based on the premise that it is not only possible to learn from difference but to deepen one’s relationship with God through difference. Working at the borders of faith enables people who practice thus to both learn from the religious other amd to hear God’s truth in a different way.  From such a perspective the argument that encounter with other faiths can weaken one’s own faith is all part of the journey.  The cultural dissonance through the exposure to challenge 
can create new insights around one’s own faith and one’s own truth. As Knitter would argue, an exclusive approach to religious worship based on a singular moral authority denies the spiritual learning accessible from the diversity of humankind.   
 
c) Transformation 
The enablement of people to initiate a process of mutual action, critical consciousness, and shared humanity for the purpose of positive human change.  
 
The following quote by Clooney extends the discussion above on the value of religious encounter.  
Instead of trying to protect the tradition from the possibility of contamination that goes together with encounter, comparative theologians intentionally move to the borderland of tradition. As go-betweens, they invest in learning from the other, accepting that this also entails disturbing experiences of alienation, disenchantment, and friction (2011, p. 165).  
 
There are two points I wish to highlight in this quote.  One is the focus on invested learning and the other is the ‘alienation, disenchantment, and friction’, associated with such learning.   Transformation in our own lives demand that we learn and take on the challenges around us.  In this regard interfaith dialogue always presents as a choice.  A choice around leaving the theological comfort zone to learn something new. In doing so we will encounter rich learning opportunities that extend our understanding.   Likewise, for interfaith dialogue, seeking difference, rather than similarity and learning from such difference also presents as an unknown journey; but one of rich possibility.   The work of people such as Clooney, Knitter and Sharma informs us that a possible pathway to God lies in neither opposing or agreeing with otherness but rather creating a space of reflection around the doubt. 
 
Conclusion 
I began this paper with two principle related questions. 
 
Does only one religious tradition contain insight into truth or do all?  Can we learn from other traditions or should we hold that our own religious tradition as complete in our relationship with the divine?  
 
In the context of interfaith dialogue my suggestion, based on the ideals of comparative theology, is that we look to explore difference between religions more broadly contextualised through the human need to search for meaning within the vicinity of the divine. A principle challenge lies in the unconscious ways that we see both ourselves and others within the myriad of meanings that constitute our modern lives.  A learning based dialogical approach informed through comparative theology suggests that the value of interfaith dialogue lies not in protecting our viewpoints but in realising our vulnerability.  Doing so enables us to not only to learn but to change and to promote change in others. If we are going to act on the challenges of our capitalistic, spiritually complex and politically divergent world, ‘otherness’ presents not as challenge but a facilitative factor for defining who we are.   
 
   
 
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A Buddhist Spectrum: Marco Pallis | PDF | Religion And Belief

A Buddhist Spectrum: Marco Pallis | PDF | Religion And Belief



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A Buddhist Spectrum: Marco Pallis


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[Perennial Philosophy] Marco Pallis - A Buddhist Spectrum_ Contributions to the Christian-Buddhist Dialogue (Perennial Philosophy) (2004, World Wisdom) - Libgen.lc

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A Buddhist Spectrum
Marco Pallis
Foreword by

Wayne Teasdale
Introduction by

Seyyed Hossein Nasr










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About this Book
“Marco Pallis’
A Buddhist Spectrum
is an admirable compendium of perennial wisdom, an authentic summation of Buddhism encom-passing its profoundest truths. It is written in a clear, classicalEnglish that is a delight to read, while daring to confront us with therealities of contemporary life dominated as it is by animalisticatavisms, estranging us from our specific humanness.“Modern ‘economic man,’ Pallis observes, oscillates between theanimal and the
petra
(hungry ghost), alienated as he is from him-self, under the illusions of an infinitely expanding consumption,uninterruptedly propagated as a ‘higher standard of living.’Estranged from ourselves as we are, this noble book can be trustedto overcome some of the almost insurmountable road blocks onour way home.”—
Fredrick Franck
, artist and author of
The Zen of Seeing
and
Messenger of the Heart: The Book of Angelus Silesius
“Marco Pallis’ contribution is unique and inspiring. At once a bril-liant comparative religionist, who moves back and forth with easefrom one tradition to another, seeing the commonalities, parallels,and differences, he is also subtle, wise, and committed to an expe-riential depth of appreciation which is the hallmark of a devotedpractitioner. He doesn’t just talk about Buddhism, he also practicesit, and so its deeper life is available to him … His probing mindunites a talented philosopher gifted in metaphysics with the schol-ar and mystic. [
A Buddhist Spectrum
is] a timeless treasure!”—
Wayne Teasdale
, Catholic Theological Union, authorof
The Mystic Heart: Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World's Religions
and
A Monk in the World: Cultivating a Spiritual Life












“The work of Marco Pallis radiates a distinctively Buddhist ambi-ence. The tone is less combative and more amiable than that foundin the work of some of the other traditionalists, but he is no lesstough-minded.”—
Kenneth Oldmeadow
, author of
Traditionalism: Religion in the Light of the Perennial Philosophy
and
Journeys East: 20th Century Western Encounters with Eastern Religious Traditions
“Without a doubt, there is no better introduction to the mainnotions of Buddhism for the Western mind than this famous classic.Indeed,
A Buddhist Spectrum
is remarkable for its ability to convey, ina very elegant and persuasive manner, difficult and sometimes mis-understood aspects of this Eastern religion. Many misinterpreta-tions can be avoided by readers who encounter Buddhism for thefirst time through this book, as well as by more advanced ones.”—
Jean-Pierre Lafouge
, Marquette University“An honest and creative attempt to interpret Buddhist teachingsand apply them to basic religious issues that are alive today.
A Buddhist Spectrum
will be an appropriate resource for courses incomparative religion.”—
Joel Brereton
, Columbia University