|
Letter to
Presidents of Bishops' Conferences Your Excellency, 1. Though there have always been contacts between Catholics
and the followers of other religions, the Second Vatican Council, and in
particular the Declaration Nostra Aetate, can be considered a
watershed in these relations. It brought about a renewal in the outlook
of the Church towards other religions. In the intervening years, guided
by the teaching of the Pontifical Magisterium and by such documents as The
Attitude of the Church toward the Followers of Other Religions (1984)
and Dialogue and Proclamation (1991), Catholics have been making
considerable efforts to meet the followers of other religions. They have
undertaken various initiatives and, with time, these have increased in
number and become more widespread. Encounters with people of other
religions occur at the level of daily life, in the joint promotion of
social projects, in the exchange of religious experience, and in formal
exchanges where Christians and other believers discuss elements of
belief or practice. Catholics and other Christians engaged in such interreligious
dialogue are becoming more and more convinced of the need of a sound
Christian spirituality to uphold their efforts. The Christian who meets
other believers is not involved in an activity which is marginal to his
or her faith. Rather is it something which arises from the demands of
that faith. It flows from faith and should be nourished by faith. In October 1998 the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue
took the Spirituality of Dialogue as the theme of its Plenary
Assembly. At the end of the Assembly the Members thought it would be
useful to share some of the reflections with our brothers in the
episcopate around the world. They asked me to write to you to report on
some of the considerations put forward during our meeting, and to
request your reaction in view of an eventual document from our Council. 2. God is love and communion God is love and communion. As St John tells us, God is love (cf 1 Jn
4:16). The mystery of the Most Blessed Trinity reveals to us that the
Eternal Father loves the Son, the Son loves the Father, and this mutual
love of the Father and the Son is the Person of the Holy Spirit.
Moreover the Father communicates himself entirely to the Son who is God
from God, Light from Light. The Holy Spirit who proceeds from the Father
and the Son is together with the Father and the Son one God who is
communion in the depth of his mystery. This Trinitarian mystery of love
and communion is the eminent model for human relations and the
foundation of dialogue. 3. God communicates himself to humankind Out of his bountiful love God decided to communicate himself to the
human beings that he had created. The Only-Begotten Son of God took on
human nature in order "to gather the scattered children of
God" (Jn 11:52)., to restore communion between humanity and God, to
communicate divine life to people and finally to bring them to the
eternal vision of God. The Incarnation is the supreme manifestation of God's saving will. It
is the way chosen by God to go in search of the human being, damaged and
estranged from God by original sin, as the shepherd goes in search of
the lost sheep. Incarnation means, on the one hand, that the Son of God
assumed all that is positive in human nature. On the other hand, it
takes the form of kenosis. As St Paul writes to the Philippians:
“Have this mind among yourselves, which was in Christ Jesus, who,
though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a
thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant,
being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form he
humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross”
(Phil 2:5-8). This was the way chosen in the divine plan to reestablish
communion between humankind and God, to recapitulate all things so that
finally “God may be all in all” (1 Cor 15:28; cf. Eph 1:15). So when
Christians meet other believers, they are called to have the mind of
Christ, to follow in his footsteps. 4. Conversion to God The Christian who wishes to enter into contact and establish
collaboration with other believers must strive first of all to be
converted to God. In this context conversion to God is understood as
openness to the action of the Holy Spirit within oneself, seeking
positively to discern the will of God, and readiness to do this will
when it is known. The Christian is aware that everyone is bound to
search for the will of God and to obey it as it is made known by
informed conscience. Everyone can, and should, make progress in this
commitment to seek and do God's will. Moreover, the more the partners in
interreligious dialogue “seek the face of God” (cf. Ps 27:8), the
nearer they will come to each other and the better chance they will have
of understanding each other. It can be seen, therefore, that
interreligious dialogue is a deeply religious activity. 5. Christian identity in dialogue The Christian who meets other believers does so as a member of the
Christian faith community, and therefore as a witness to Jesus Christ.
It is important that the Christian should have a clear religious
identity. Interreligious dialogue does not demand that the Christian
should set some elements of Christian belief or practice aside, putting
them as it were between parentheses, much less putting them in doubt. On
the contrary, other believers want to know clearly whom they are
meeting. It is our firm conviction that God wants all persons to be saved (cf
1Tim 2:4) and that God can give his grace also outside the visible
boundaries of the Church (cf LG 16; Redemptor Hominis 10). At the
same time the Christian is aware that Jesus Christ, the Son of God made
man, is the one and only Saviour of all humanity, and that only in the
Church which Christ founded are to be found the means of salvation in
all their fulness. This should in no way induce the Christian to assume
a triumphalistic attitude or to act out of a superiority complex. On the
contrary, it is with humility and with a desire for mutual enrichment
that one will meet with other believers, while holding firmly to the
truths of the Christian faith. Interreligious dialogue, when conducted
in this vision of faith, in no way leads to religious relativism. 6. Proclamation and dialogue In dialogue the Christian is called to be a witness to Christ,
imitating the Lord in his proclamation of the Kingdom, his concern and
compassion for each individual person and his respect for that person’s
liberty. There is a need to rediscover the close connection between
proclamation and dialogue as elements of the evangelizing mission of the
Church (cf Dialogue and Proclamation 77-85). It will be seen that
these elements are not interchangeable, nor are they to be confused, yet
they are indeed related (cf Redemptoris Missio 55). Proclamation
aims at conversion in the sense of free acceptance of the Good News of
Christ and becoming a member of the Church. Dialogue, on the other hand,
presupposes conversion in the sense of a return of the heart to God in
love and obedience to His will, in other words, openness of the heart to
the action of God (cf. The Attitude of the Church toward the
Followers of other Religions 37). It is God who attracts people to
himself, sending His Spirit who is at work in the depths of their
hearts. 7. The need to understand other believers The Christian who engages in interreligious initiatives feels more
and more the need to understand other religions in order precisely to
understand better the followers of these religions. It will be seen that
there are many points of contact: belief in one God who is Creator, the
aspiration to transcendence, the practice of fasting and almsgiving,
recourse to prayer and meditation, the importance of pilgrimage. The differences,
however, should not be overlooked. A Christian spirituality of dialogue
will grow if both these dimensions are maintained. While appreciating
the workings of the Spirit of God among people of other religions, not
only in the hearts of individuals but also in some of their religious
rites (cf RM 55), the uniqueness of the Christian faith will be
respected. 8. In faith, hope and charity The spirituality which is to animate and uphold interreligious
dialogue is one which is lived out in faith, hope and charity. There is
faith in God, who is the Creator and Father of the whole of humanity,
who dwells in light inaccessible and whose mystery the human mind is
incapable of penetrating. Hope characterises a dialogue which does not
demand to see instant results, but holds on firmly to the belief that
"dialogue is a path towards the Kingdom and will certainly bear
fruit, even if the time and seasons are known only to the Father (cf
Acts 1:7)" (RM 57). Charity which comes from God, and is
communicated to us by the Holy Spirit, urges the Christian to share
God's love with other believers in a gratuitous way. The Christian is
therefore convinced that interreligious activity flows out of the heart
of the Christian faith. 9. Nourished by prayer and sacrifice This spirituality is nourished by prayer and sacrifice. Prayer links
the Christian with the goodness and power of God without whom we can do
nothing (cf Jn 15:5). Without God's life-giving action, mere human
activity is not able to effect any permanent spiritual good. Sacrifice
strengthens prayer and promotes communion with others. Christians learn
from their faith to love other believers even when the latter apparently
do not reciprocate, or at least not immediately. The teaching of Christ
is that we must love with detachment, that we should be ready to walk
the extra mile, that we should not look for revenge if we suffer
wrong-doing but rather seek to overcome evil by good. This is a sign not
of weakness, but of spiritual strength. 10. Your suggestions In communicating the above reflections of our Plenary Assembly to our
brothers in the episcopate, through you, the Presidents of the Bishops'
Conferences, I wish to ask for your own reflections and suggestions. It
is obvious that these will take into account the experience of
interreligious dialogue in your area, the difficulties encountered but
also the fruits that have been evident. I would be grateful if your
answer could reach me before September 1999. It will be extremely
helpful to our Pontifical Council in the preparation of an eventual
document on the Spirituality of Dialogue. Thanking you for your kind cooperation, I remain, Devotedly Yours in Christ Francis Cardinal Arinze Vatican City: 3 March, 1999 Towards a document on the Spirituality of Dialogue 1. What has been the experience of interreligious dialogue in your
Diocese, in your area, in your country? What have been the major
difficulties encountered? What would you see as the fruits of this
dialogue? 2. What has been the impact of relations with the followers of
other religions on the spirituality of the Christians, lay-persons,
religious men and women or priests, in your Diocese, area, country? 3. What points of the letter on the Spirituality of Dialogue do
you consider to be particularly important? Are there any which you would
like to see further developed? Are there any points which have not been
mentioned and which you would like to see included in a document on the
Spirituality of Dialogue? |