Interfaith Insight - 2022
Permanent link for "Stories inform our faith and our theology" by Doug Kindschi on July 26, 2022
Last Tuesday’s Weekly Watch featured Eboo Patel, founder of
the Interfaith Youth Core and Interfaith America speaking at our
Jewish-Christian-Muslim Dialogue in 2018. He described a theology
of interfaith. He did it with a story from the Qur’an about the
creation of humans and how Adam could give the names of creation while
the angels could not. Patel noted that the term in the Qur’an is
plural, “names,” indicating the variety and diversity of creation.
Patel also noted that later the Qur’an affirms the diversity of
people, and states God “made you different tribes so you could learn
from each other and compete in doing good.”
The creation stories in Jewish and Christian scriptures have also
had significant impact on the theology and the faith understanding of
those communities. The concept of each person’s intrinsic worth
derives from the concept of being made in God’s image. Care for the
weak, the stranger, and the refugee are also outgrowths of that concept.
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, prior to his death in 2020, wrote about the
Jewish love of telling stories and of the formative power of such
stories in the identity of the Jewish people.
The Exodus story is the primary story that is told in the Jewish
community each year during Passover and at the Seder meal. Scripture
as well as the sages have for thousands of years taught that it is the
story to be told to the children each year. Sacks writes, “We come to
know who we are by discovering of which story or stories we are a
part. … If we are the story we tell about ourselves, then as long as
we never lose the story, we will never lose our identity.”
Sacks continued the theme, writing about an encounter between the
Dalai Lama and the Jewish community that was documented by Roger
Kamenetz in his book, The Jew in the Lotus. When the Dalai Lama and
many of his followers had to flee Tibet because of the oppression from
the Chinese who had been governing Tibet, he feared that the exile
might last a long time. He decided to ask the Jews for advice,
regarding them as experts in maintaining identity in exile and he
wanted to know their secret.
Following the weeklong discussion they learned the importance of
storytelling to keep the culture and identity alive. They talked about
the Seder service, leading to a special Seder in Washington D.C. with
the Dalai Lama where he share these words:
In our dialogue with Rabbis and Jewish scholars, the Tibetan
people have learned about the secrets of Jewish spiritual survival
in exile: one secret is the Passover Seder. Through it for 2,000
years, even in very difficult times, Jewish people remember their
liberation from slavery to freedom and this has brought you hope in
times of difficulty. We are grateful to our Jewish brothers and
sisters for adding to their celebration of freedom the thought of
freedom for the Tibetan people.
Sacks concludes his recounting of the power of telling and
retelling the Exodus story with, “It gave Jews the most tenacious
identity ever held by a nation. In the eras of oppression, it gave
hope of freedom. At times of exile, it promised return. It told two
hundred generations of Jewish children who they were and of what story
they were a part. It became the world’s master-narrative of liberty,
adopted by an astonishing variety of groups, from Puritans in the 17th
century to African-Americans in the 19th and to Tibetan Buddhists today.”
Narratives or stories are often the way we reinforce and carry
our various group identities. Religious narratives not only build
identity of whom we consider to be in our tribe, but also become the
containers for our basic human values. It is all too easy, however,
to focus on differences in our stories, rituals, and beliefs rather
than the deeper values that nearly all religious narratives support
and teach.
Alasdair MacIntyre, political and moral philosopher, wrote, “Man
is essentially a storytelling animal, but a teller of stories that
aspire to truth.” Our religious traditions over the centuries have
given us the stories that form our identity, bind us together, and
help us aspire to truth.
Posted on Permanent link for "Stories inform our faith and our theology" by Doug Kindschi on July 26, 2022.