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Receipt of the Divine Word - 22nd
Israeli-Palestinian Retreat on 5th & 6th June 2008:
How does God communicate with us?
That, in essence, was the question that a group of Palestinian Muslims and
Israeli Jews explored over two half-day sessions, Thursday and Friday of
last week, at the Austrian Hospice in Jerusalem’s Old City.
We were participating in a joint retreat of the Interfaith Encounter
Association, an Israeli organization, and the Palestinian Peace Society.
The Jews were mostly “Anglos,” native English speakers, immigrants to
Israel. Professionally the group included two people on the staff of IEA
(both of whom have PhDs in topics related to Jewish mysticism!), a hazzan/artist,
a teacher, a businessman/rabbi, etc. The Palestinians were all from Hebron
or Tulkarm and included a professor, a government official, an accountant, a
businessman. Very diverse group.
Fr. Markus Stephan Bugnyar, the rector of the Austrian Hospice (which is NOT
what the term “hospice” connotes in contemporary American English – it is,
rather, a guesthouse for tourists!) presented the Christian view of
revelation.
He pointed out how Jews believe the Torah was revealed to Moses, and the
Koran was revealed to Muslims, but Christians have no concept similar to
this. Jesus did not write any of the gospels himself, in the way that Moses
is considered the author of the Torah, or Mohammed the author of the Koran.
Further, unlike the Torah, where we see the refrain “God spoke to Moses
saying” over and over, phrases like that aren’t used in the New Testament.
God does not speak to Jesus – Jesus simply speaks. They take this as a
further proof of the divinity of Jesus. When we started discussing the
concept of the divinity of Jesus,” Jesus as God,” one of the Muslim
participants got quite upset and needed to be calmed down by his
co-religionists.
An important ground rule was mentioned by the meeting organizers – we are
not there to critique each other’s religions. We were there to hear what
Christians have to say about their relationship with the Bible, what Muslims
have to say about their relationship with Koran, etc. NOT what Christians
think of the Koran or what Muslims think of the New Testament. Keeping that
principle in mind is a good way to avoid acrimonious debate that does
nothing to further respect for each other.
Rabbi Joel Zeff, Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Hamivtar, presented the Jewish
perspective. He talked about the desire of humans to love God and of God to
love humans and about the challenge in that as God is infinite and we are
finite. The solution comes from the Mystical saying that the whole of Torah
is composed of God's names. And as the name represents the essence of the
thing, this means that the Torah is the essence of God. God put his thoughts
and will in the Torah – we connect with God through the Torah. The Mystics
of the Kabala say that when we learn Torah we take its wisdom and put it in
our brain, but as the Torah is God's essence – when we do that actually God
is in our soul. In this way we make love to God and the main importance of
the revelation is the way to do that.
Dr. Taleb Al-Harithi, coordinator of the Palestinian Peace Society presented
the Muslim perspective. He talked about how the archangel Gabriel served as
an intermediary between God and Mohammed, but just as for the Jews, their
holy scripture is believed to contain the word of God. He also spoke about
how the Muslims also consider the Torah and the New Testament revelations of
the Divine Word. Interestingly he mentioned that Muslims believe in the
immaculate conception, the concept that Mary was made pregnant without a
physical father, but they don’t take that as meaning Jesus is a physical
incarnation of God – they just believe that it was a miraculous pregnancy.
They revere the Jewish prophets and Jesus as prophets, some of whom, like
Moses, rise to the highest rank of “messenger of God.”
Following each of the presentations we had time for conversation in small
groups. Some of the issues that came up were: what brings us closer to God
and what take us away from him? Even prophets make mistake – only God is
perfect; The most effective love is the one based on the guidance of
religion; True lover of God truly loves people; and more.
As is often the case when I’ve been involved in gatherings of the “Abrahamic
faiths” we discovered that Judaism and Islam are very close to each other
theologically – Christianity is sort of the “odd man out” with a lot of
concepts that would appear to be rooted in Hellenistic thought, not Jewish
thought.
One of the participants asked whether it is better that people be religious,
or not? In other words, is religion a force for good, or a force for evil?
I shared the idea that in each of our traditions we can find teachings of
love, and teachings of religion can be a powerful force for good and peace.
If we focus on the “Torah of hate,” religion can be a powerful force for
racism and violence. I think this is why the Baal Shem Tov (the Besht)
taught that one has to do teshuva BEFORE studying Torah – for Torah is an
amplifier that can make good people better, or, God forbid, bad people
worse.
I hope that in future gatherings we will feel comfortable enough with each
other to take a look at the “troubling texts” we each have in our
traditions, and talk about ways we can defuse them within a religious
context. I don’t think we can simply ignore the unpleasant verses in the
Koran or the Torah.
All the participants I think left feeling warmly toward everyone. Our
challenge is to bring that message to others – the Palestinians need to let
their friends know that not all Jews are crazy people bent on oppressing
them, and the Jews need to let their friends know that not all Palestinians
are latent suicide bombers. Long term, I believe activities like this are
essential to building bridges and building peace. If only we could multiply
the number of participants geometrically!!!
Based on a blog written by Rabby Barry Leff (who took part in
this retreat), adapted by Yehuda Stolov
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