Especially for new Christians (5) Christianity and other Religions

Sun, 19 Jan 1997

Clergy/Leaders' Mail-list No. 351 

Another in the series 'Especially for New Christians'. The full ms. is
on our home page.

     Shalom!  Rowland Croucher

     Director, John Mark Ministries - resources for pastors/leaders.
       (Bookroom, library, and worldwide F.W.Boreham Trading Post)
                 Home Page: http://www.pastornet.net.au/jmm


                  CHRISTIANITY AND OTHER RELIGIONS

'God is dead, Marx is dead, and I don't feel too good myself!' In a
pluralistic culture we are more aware of others' beliefs.

A missionary in Nigeria visited a young man in back street of Lagos. On
his bedside table were the Bible, the Book of Common Prayer, the Koran,
three copies of Watchtower (magazine of the Jehovah's Witnesses), a
biography of Karl Marx, a book of Yoga exercises, and How to Stop
Worrying and Start Living by Dale Carnegie.

These days we travel more, TV shows documentaries of foreign cultures,
students study abroad, multiculturalism in the West is here to stay...

Intolerance is increasing too.  Militant Hindus have a motto 'Save
India from Christian imperialism!' Many Moslem countries make it a
punishable offense to proselytize.  Then there's the Sudan, Bosnia,
Northern Ireland...  Religion and politics can be volatile subjects,
particularly when they mix.

Something else has never happened before.  People (to paraphrase
T.S.Eliot) have left God not for other gods, they say, but for no gods;
and this is a modern phenomenon.  It is possible both to deny gods and
worship gods - gods like rationality, money, power, sport etc. And it
will all lead to an age advancing progressively backwards...

Of all the world's religions, Christianity has the greatest number of
followers (33%), followed by Islam (18%), Hinduism (13%), and Buddhism
(6%).

What is religion?  Definitions are legion: 'what we do with our
solitariness'; 'how we relate to others'; 'our answer to fear'; 'an
ultimate attempt to enlarge and complete one's personality by finding
the supreme context in which we rightly belong'. Everyone is religious,
in some sense.

Although Freud termed religion 'mass neurosis' -- religious believers
were infantile, unable to break outgrown ties with their parents -- Carl
Jung said of his patients over thirty-five, 'all have been people whose
problem in the last resort was that of finding a religious outlook on
life.'

There is an increasing hunger for religious reality. 'Baby-boomers'
under 45 are not in church as often as their elders, but they claim to
be as religious. They read Shirley Maclaine and play around with the New
Age movement.  In a noisy world people searching for 'God who is Sound
and Silence' as the Maitri Upanishad puts it are going in larger numbers
to Buddhist monasteries and Hindu ashrams -- places of quiet serenity,
simple life-style, meditation, brief talks and questions. More young
people are reading the Hindu Bhagavad Gita, the Chinese I Ching, or do
Yoga, transcendental meditation or Zen courses.

Let's ask the hard questions in order: Was Ghandi a Christian? No, as we
saw in the movie, Ghandi, although he admired Jesus, he lived and died a
Hindu.  But E. Stanley Jones said of him: 'He taught me more of the
spirit of Christ than anyone in East or West.'

A harder question: Is Ghandi in heaven? Christians offer three broad
answers: (1) Conservative Christians have their doubts. The principle of
Karma (cause and effect - paying off your own guilt) is poles apart from
grace (God's free forgiveness, which you don't deserve). Augustine's
theology inspired western Christians to believe that those outside the
church are dammed.  A more refined view might be Karl Barth's 'Religion
is unbelief', or Hendrik Kraemer's conviction that non-Christian
religions were not means of salvation in any sense.

However, others would argue, what kind of God would organize for most of
his human creatures to burn in hell forever - many of them because, by
accident of birth, or the disobedience of the Christian minority to
evangelize, they had never heard the gospel? Is he not the Father of
Jesus, who prayed for those who crucified him? Does he not want all to
be saved and come to know the truth (1 Timothy 2:3,4)?

(2) More liberal Christians would answer: 'Be tolerant.  There's value
in all religions. They all lead ultimately to God.  Of course Ghandi is
with him!' The problem with this view is its failure to take seriously
the question of truth.  If the original Christians were 'liberal' there
would have been no mission, no univeral Church.

(3) Is there a way between these two extremes?  Yes, the more cautious
say 'Only God knows: our eternal destiny is in his hands alone'. With
evangelicals like Howard Guinness (The Seekers) or JND Anderson
(Christianity and Comparative Religion) they ask:  Does God 'accept'
only people within the 'covenant community' - whether Jewish (in the OT)
or Christian (in the NT)?  No:  what about Melchisedek, Rahab, and
Cornelius?  Certainly Jesus Christ is unique, and Divine:  he alone was
God in human form. We are not to take everyone's views, mix them up, and
get an identikit picture of God.  Jesus is the only way to God. But that
may not mean that only Christians are saved (see Romans 2:11-16).

Roman Catholics, at the Second Vatican Council, moved from extra
ecclesiam nulla alus (outside the Church, no salvation) to 'The
Catholic Church rejects nothing of what is true and holy in other
religions.' Devotees of non-Christian religions may be 'implicit
believers' or, in Karl Rahner's phrase, 'anonymous Christians'.  Hans
Kung says these religions may provide ordinary, whereas the Christian
Gospel provides extraordinary means of salvation.

Don Richardson (Eternity in Their Hearts), says God has revealed
himself to more people than we might imagine.  The one invisible God is
resident in many folk religions.  Christianity doesn't replace this
revelation, he says, but completes it. Pachacuti, King of the Incas, led
a religious reform in the 1400s encouraging his people to worship
Viracocha, the Creator, rather than Inti, the sungod. His hymns to
Viracocha sound like the Hebrew Psalms. When missionaries came to the
Santals in India in the 1800s, they found a tradition about Thakur Jiu,
'the Genuine God'. Many became Christians. The Chinese had Shang Ti, the
Lord of heaven. The Karens of Burma believed in Y'wa, the true God.

Non-Christian religions are a testimony to people's search for God. They
may be far from the God of Jesus, but God is not far from any one of
them. God cares for all his human creatures with a love we who are
biassed in favour of those who are like us can't imagine. His rain falls
on the just and the unjust...

All religions have good and evil elements.  As novelist Mary McCarthy
observed: religion makes good people good and bad people bad. Christians
have burnt heretics, Jews robbed Palestinians of lands and homes, some
Hindus still burn widows (sati), tribal witchdoctors put curses on
people, Moslems wage religious wars. (An eminent Egyptian scholar said
privately to Hendrik Kraemer: 'I no longer believe in Islam but, if
anyone were to attack the prophet publicly, I would kill him!'). Never
forget that Jesus was rejected and sent to his death by people who
belonged to a highly moral and spiritual religion. But, you say, well,
Christianity has sanctioned evil, but in essence it is good. True:
people from other religions say the same of their faiths too.

Christianity, said Karl Barth, stands as much under the judgment of the
Gospel as other religions.  Roman Catholicism will be judged for the
Inquisition; and the Protestant John Calvin for standing by as Geneva
burned the 'heretic' Servetus...

Will everyone be saved? George Macdonald says all answers to such a
question are deceptive. Two things are certain: all who are saved are
saved through Jesus Christ.  And a merciful God can handle the judgment
of his loved creatures without our help!  Jesus said everyone's going to
be surprised at the last judgment. We should aim to be secure in our own
faith, and be open-minded about matters that are God's prerogative.

So why evangelize? To get them into heaven?  Yes, but there are better
motives: the glory of God, obedience to Christ, and sincere love for
others.  Although Christ is not known everywhere, he is everywhere.  We
are called to make him known, not to make him present.

Some don'ts and do's in evangelism: Don't major on the faults in other
religions: the faults in your own are bad enough.  Don't argue: you may
win the argument but lose the person:  today the world is a conference
table not a lecture hall, so learn to listen as well as you talk. Above
all, be compassionate: Jesus preached judgment on Jerusalem when it
rejected him, but he also wept for the city. Share your faith, as a
beggar sharing bread with another beggar. Ask 'what are my friend's felt
needs?', and start there. (An African proverb says 'Hungry people have
no ears!'). Invite overseas students home: perhaps your family could
'adopt' one. (Most in the Book of Acts were converted while away from
home).  Teach English to some one. Encourage your church to translate
the service into another language, or host an ethnic church.

And, beyond all that, remember Jesus' approach to Nicodemas.  This
cultured man wanted to talk about the contrasts between Jesus' teaching
and that of Judaism.  The conversation started courteously enough, but
very soon Jesus said to him 'You must be born again!'

That is still the essence of the good news - even for the very
religious.
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