A Common Word: Muslims and Christians on Loving God and Neighbor
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A Common Word - Miroslav Volf
Preface
The Muslim signatories of the October 2007 letter, A Common Word Between Us and You,
proposed that the two greatest commandments according to Jesus Christ, namely to love God and to love our neighbors, were later affirmed by the Prophet Muhammad and therefore describe the most basic attitudes, values, and practices that Muslims and Christians hold in common. Shortly after the letter was released, many key Christian leaders from a wide spectrum of Christian traditions welcomed the Muslim initiative by signing Loving God and Neighbor Together,
a Christian response to A Common Word.
Each of these two documents affirmed irresolvable differences as well as this central commonality between the two religions. They also left much room to explore fundamental questions undergirding the claim that Muslims and Christians share the command to love God and neighbor: Do Muslims and Christians understand the same thing when they envision and endeavor to live out their love for God and their love for neighbor?
The authors in this book seek to explore these important questions in order to uncover foundations for peaceful coexistence between Christians and Muslims. In doing so, they specifically address and engage the religious commitments of adherents of these two great religions who strive to take their faith seriously. Religion is too often branded as merely a contributor to violence, and faith questions are therefore frequently avoided at the peacemaking table. But while recognizing that religious and non-religious peacemaking efforts best work in tandem to promote nonviolence, the contributors of this book believe that an essential foundation to effective peacemaking consists precisely in Christians and Muslims intentionally drawing on the resources of their respective faiths and approaches to devotion to God.
This book contains articles by some of the most prominent theologians and leaders in Islam and Christianity today. They were presented, discussed, and debated in July of 2008 at Yale University. The first two chapters are written by the co-hosts of the Yale conference and editors of this book, and they outline the current crisis in Muslim-Christian relations, along with the reasons why any solutions to that crisis must draw on the resources of our respective faiths. After the opening chapters readers will find the original letter, A Common Word Between Us and You,
and then Loving God and Neighbor Together: A Christian Response to ‘A Common Word Between Us and You,’
which has come to be known as the Yale Response. In addition to the original text of the Yale Response as published in the New York Times on November 18, 2007, the reader will also find an extensive commentary that gives insight into discussions surrounding the wording of the original Yale Response.
The second section addresses the questions of what it means to love God and love one’s neighbor from the Muslim perspective. The authors represent four different continents and both the Sunni and Shi’i branches of Islam. Their perspectives also range from those of academicians, as in the cases of Seyyed Hossein Nasr and Reza Shah-Kazemi, to the popular Yemeni spiritual teacher, Shaykh Habib Ali al-Jifri, and a judge and member of the Nigerian Owu Royal family, Prince Judge Bola Abdul Jabbar Ajibola.
The third section addresses the important questions of what it means to love God and to love neighbor from the Christian perspective, with contributors from around the globe representing a wide range of backgrounds. The Christian scholars hail from three different continents and represent individuals who not only have thought deeply about these issues but have sought to put them into practice over the course of many years, as academics, institutional leaders, and community developers (Martin Accad, David Burrell, Harvey Cox, Joseph Cumming, and Miroslav Volf).
The fourth section includes two chapters on frequently asked questions. The first was written by Muslims to answer questions about A Common Word,
and the second was written by Christians to answer the questions that other Christians ask about the Yale Response. The volume concludes with the speech given by Senator John Kerry at the Yale conference describing the role of this dialogue in global peacemaking efforts.
What are our hopes as we send this book into the world? That it will inform people about a central aspect of the two largest faiths in the world today — love of God and love of the neighbor — and stimulate critical discussion of the possibilities of Christians and Muslims living in peace with one another without compromising their own authentic identity or disrespecting the other.
THE EDITORS
PART I
Invitation and Response
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful May Peace and Blessings be upon the Prophet Muhammad
On A Common Word Between Us and You
H.R.H. PRINCE GHAZI BIN MUHAMMAD OF JORDAN
A Common Word Between Us and You
was launched on October 13th 2007 initially as an open letter signed by 138 leading Muslim scholars and intellectuals (including such figures as the Grand Muftis of Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Oman, Bosnia, Russia, and Istanbul) to the leaders of the Christian churches and denominations of the entire world, including His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI. In essence it proposed, based on verses from the Holy Qurʾan and the Holy Bible, that Islam and Christianity share, at their core, the twin golden
commandments of the paramount importance of loving God and loving one’s neighbor. Based on this joint common ground, it called for peace and harmony between Christians and Muslims worldwide.
Introduction: The Birth of A Common Word
In the middle of the eastern Jordanian desert, in a place called Safawi, miles away from anything, from any landmark or any human traces, there stands a unique, solitary tree. This tree is around 1500 years old and there are no other trees to be seen for dozens of miles in any direction. Despite its age and breadth, it is only about 6-8 meters tall. It is a butum tree, a kind of pistachio tree found in Jordan and surrounding countries, and it was under this particular butum tree that A Common Word
was born. For in September 2007, one month before the launch of A Common Word,
I had the privilege of visiting this tree twice — once in the company of a number of the scholars behind the Common Word
initiative — and it was under this tree that we prayed to God (or at least I did) to grant A Common Word
success.
In what follows, we will endeavor to outline the reasons why the Common Word initiative was so necessary at this time in history by describing the current state of Muslim-Christian relations, the causes for tension between these two religious communities, and the subsequent concerns for the future. After this background, we will describe the goals and motives for launching A Common Word
; explain what we did not intend by this initiative; discuss the reasons for primarily engaging religious leadership; and, finally, summarize the initial results.
Background: The Current State of Muslim-Christian Relations
In the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there surfaced various influential political theories regarding the future of the world, including Samuel Huntington’s 1993 thesis of a Clash of Civilizations, Francis Fukayama’s The End of History and the Last Man, written in 1992, and Robert Kaplan’s seminal article The Coming Anarchy of February 1994. In this article, Kaplan uses the image of a luxury car driving one way on a highway and a stream of destitute refugees walking the other way to suggest that while one part of the world is moving comfortably and prosperously forward, much of the rest of the world is suffering horribly and disintegrating due to poverty, disease, crime, conflict, tribalism, overpopulation, and pollution. Assessing each of these theories can help us better understand the historical context of where we are today.
Huntington gets a B. He was right about tension and conflict between Muslims and the West (e.g., Bosnia 1992-95; Kosovo 1996-99; Chechnya 1994-96, 1999-2001; 9-11-2001 and Afghanistan; Iraq 2003-07, etc.) but dead wrong about either side unifying, never mind Muslim countries uniting with China. Moreover, every single Muslim country in the world has denounced terrorism, and the vast majority of governments of Muslim countries have sided with the West in one way or another. Inside Syria and Iran, the two notable exceptions to siding with the West, Christian-Muslim relations are excellent (witness Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius of Antioch’s open letter rebuffing the Pope after his September 2006 Regensburg address).
Fukayama, who declared the triumph of Western-style democracy, gets a C. President George W. Bush’s plan for a new more democratic
Middle East as outlined on November 6, 2003, to the National Endowment for Democracy still languishes. The most democratic
(in the Western sense) Muslim countries in the Middle East (Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, and Lebanon) are either in civil war or close to it. And as we should know from Hitler’s 1933 election — or from the actions of the majority of Hutus in Rwanda in 1994, or of the majority of Serbs in Bosnia from 1992-95 — western-style democracy simply does not work where: (a) there are no preexisting democratic institutions that can overrule demagoguery; (b) there is no democratic culture that can control and channel fear and hatred; and (c) the majority seeks to gain power in order to slaughter the minority, for reasons that go back hundreds of years. Plato warns us of this in the eighth book of The Republic, and Herodotus hints at it in the third book of his Histories.
Kaplan gets an A-. He was right about increased anarchy and wealth in the world, but he failed to see the unique tensions existing between Muslims and the West. Since Muslims and Christians together constitute over 55% of the world’s population, his omission is significant.
So where are we now? Sectarian wars, and political and religious distrust dominate the peoples of the Middle East and its relationship to the West. Chaos, conflict, and disease ravage the horn of Africa and Darfur. Terrorism threatens everywhere in the world. We pray conflict does not break out in the Persian Gulf.
It is true that polite and educated company all over the world make positive and optimistic comments about the other side, but there is not enough trickle-down to the masses and to popular culture. Moreover, as the current Pew Global survey shows, religious attitudes between Muslims, Christians, and Jews are generally hardening and getting worse, not better. A cursory review of the world’s biggest bookseller, Amazon.com, shows that Americans are buying more books about Islam written by vitriolic former Muslims now touted as experts and sponsored by Christian fundamentalist groups than written by serious Muslim or non-Muslim scholars. In the West there are whispers of a Long War
— an idea which in the Islamic world is taken to be directed against all Muslims.
Roots: Causes for Tension in Muslim-Christian Relations
We will only briefly sketch some of the major causes of tension, as they are well known. On the Western side are the fear of terrorism; a loathing of religious coercion; suspicion of the unfamiliar; and deep historical misunderstandings. On the Islamic side is first and foremost the situation in Palestine: despite the denial of certain parties, Palestine is a grievance rooted in faith (since Muslim holy sites lie occupied). Added are discontentment with Western foreign policy (especially the Iraq War and Occupation 2003-09); fear and resentment of the massive missionary movements launched from the West into the Islamic World; wounded pride arising from the colonial experience, poverty and unemployment, illiteracy, ignorance of true Islam and of the Arabic language, social and political oppression, and a technology gap. On both sides are vast centrifugal forces unleashed by fundamentalist and extremist movements, and by missionary activity. These far outweigh the centripetal forces set in motion by hundreds of interfaith and intercultural centers all over the world and by world governments (e.g., the Spanish-Turkish Alliance of Civilizations
; the Russian Dialogue of Civilizations
; the Kazakh Dialogue of Confessions
; the Amman Message; the French Atelier-Culturel; the British Radical Middle Way; the Malaysian Islam Hadari; the new Saudi Interfaith Initiative of 2008; etc. — and the umpteen declarations
of this or that city). The fundamentalists are better organized, more experienced, better coordinated, and more motivated. They have more stratagems, more institutes, more people, more money, more power, more influence.
We are reminded of the words of W. B. Yeats:
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned.
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
In short, Muslim-Christian relations are characterized by deeply rooted, historical, cultural, and racial misunderstanding, suspicion, and even loathing. Thus now, according to the results of the largest international religious surveys in history (as outlined in a recently-published seminal book by Professor John Esposito and Dalia Mogahed and discussed at the Yale conference), 60 percent of Christians harbor prejudice against Muslims and 30 percent of Muslims reciprocate. Quite clearly, the grounds for fear of war and religious genocides are starkly real.
Fears: The Future of Muslim-Christian Relations
With such an explosive mix, popular religious conflicts — even unto genocides — are lurking around the corner. Indeed, one such conflict took place a few hundred miles away from where the Pope sits only fifteen years or so ago (that is, from 1993-95) in the heart of Europe, when 300,000 innocent Muslim civilians were slaughtered and 100,000 Bosnian women were raped as a method of war. And our feeling is still that, God forbid, a few more terrorist attacks, a few more national security emergencies, a few more demagogues, and a few more national protection laws, and then internment camps (like those set up for Americans of Japanese origin during World War II) — if not concentration camps — are not inconceivable eventualities in some places, and that their fruition would inevitably spawn global counter-reactions.
The Holocaust of six million Jews — then the largest religious minority in Europe — occurred sixty-five years ago, still within living memory. This is something that Muslims in the West, now the largest minority, should contemplate as seriously as Jews do. For unfortunately we are not now inherently immune to committing the crimes of the past — our nature and worst potential has not fundamentally changed. Moreover, as the Gallup survey showed, we are now actually at the stage where we (as Christians and Muslims) routinely mistrust, disrespect, and dislike each other, if not popularly and actively trash, dehumanize, demonize, despise, and attack each other. This is the stage at which Hutus and Tutsis (both Christian tribes, by their own confession at least) were in Rwanda before the popular genocide-by-machete of nearly one million people in 1994. How much easier would it be for Muslims and Christians — who have been fighting for over a millennium and have viewed each other with the deepest suspicion since St. John of Damascus — to slaughter each other? And how much more likely is this possibility to become reality when we are all finally struck with the apparently looming catastrophes of global climate change, and when competition for food and natural resources becomes fiercer?
Goals and Motives behind Launching A Common Word
Our goal was very clear. We wanted — and want — to avoid a greater worldwide conflict between Muslims and the West. We wanted to — and must — resolve all our current crises. To do both, we had — and have — to find a modus vivendi to live and let live, to love thy neighbor
; this idea must be expressed from within our religious scriptures, and must then be applied everywhere.
The intention in sending out the Common Word missive was simply to try to make peace and spread harmony between Muslims and Christians globally — it was and is an extended global handshake of religious goodwill, friendship and fellowship and consequently of interreligious peace. Of course, peace is primarily a matter for governments, but Huntington’s 1993 vision of global conflict between Muslims and Christians was wrong in one important sense: post September 11, 2001, the only government as such to have opposed the West in its various demands is that of Iran (but even Iran has sided with the West against terrorism); more than fifty other Islamic nations have sided with the West. This is to say, then, that the governments of Islamic majority countries have not banded together against the governments of Christian-majority countries (much less in alliance to China), or vice versa. Nevertheless, Huntington was very correct in his prediction of heightened tensions between Christian and Muslim populations as such globally after the collapse of atheistic communism, albeit with religiously affiliated, non-government actors taking the lead.
Thus, exactly one month after His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI’s controversial and potentially incendiary Regensburg lecture on September 13, 2006, an international group of thirty-eight Muslim scholars and intellectuals (many of whom would later form the nucleus of those behind the Common Word initiative) issued an Open Letter to His Holiness (in retrospect, a letter that would prove to be a trial run
for A Common Word
) in what we thought was a very gentle and polite way of pointing out some factual mistakes in His Holiness’s lecture. We did not get a satisfactory answer from the Vatican beyond a perfunctory courtesy visit to me, a month later, from some Vatican officials. So exactly one year after issuing our first letter (and thus one year and one month after the Regensburg lecture), we increased our number by exactly 100 (to 138, symbolically saying that we are many and that we are not going away) and issued, based on the Holy Qurʾan, A Common Word between Us and You.
We repeat that we had honestly — as is evident from the genesis of this story, and as is evident, we believe, in the very text of A Common Word
itself — only one motive: peace. We were aiming to try to spread peace and harmony between Christians and Muslims all over the world, not through governments and treaties but on the all-important popular and mass level, through precisely the world’s most influential popular leaders — that is to say, through the leaders of the two religions. We wanted to stop the drumbeat of what we feared was a growing popular consensus (on both sides) for worldwide (and thus cataclysmic and perhaps apocalyptic) Muslim-Christian jihad/crusade. We were keenly aware, however, that peace efforts also required another element: knowledge. We thus aimed to spread proper basic knowledge of our religion in order to correct and abate the constant and unjust vilification of Islam, in the West especially.
What Was NOT Intended by Launching A Common Word
Having said what our motive was, we want to emphasize what our motives were not, in view of some of the strange suspicions and speculations we have read about on the internet.
(1) A Common Word
was not intended — as some have misconstrued — to trick Christians or to foist Muslim theology on them, or even to convert them to Islam. There is deliberately no mention of the Christian Trinity
in A Common Word
because Jesus (peace be upon him) never mentions it in the Gospels — and certainly not when discussing the Two Greatest Commandments. Indeed, we believe the word Trinity
(or triune,
for that matter) itself does not occur once in the whole Bible, but comes from the Christian creeds some time later. Of course, Muslims and Christians differ irreconcilably on this point, but the Christian part of A Common Word
is based on Jesus’ (peace be upon him) own words — which Christians can obviously interpret for themselves. Besides, as we understand it, Christians also insist on the Unity of God, and so we sought, through Jesus’ (peace be upon him) own words, to find what we do have in common in so far as it goes, not denying what we know we disagree upon beyond that.
(2) A Common Word
was not intended to reduce both our religions to an artificial union based on the Two Commandments. Indeed in Matthew 22:40 Jesus Christ the Messiah (peace be upon him) was quite specific: "On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets (Matthew 22:40) —
hang, not
are (reduced to)." Ours was simply an attempt to find a theologically correct, preexisting essential common ground (albeit interpreted perhaps differently) between Islam and Christianity, rooted in our sacred texts and in their common Abrahamic origin, in order to stop our deep-rooted religiously mutual suspicions from being an impediment to behaving properly toward each other. It was, and is, an effort to ensure that religions behave as part of the solution and are not misused to become part of the problem. Indeed, the Two Commandments give us guidelines and a concrete, shared standard of behavior not only for what to expect from the other but also for how we must ourselves behave and be. We believe we can and must hold ourselves and each other to this shared standard.
(3) A Common Word
was not intended to deny that God loved us first, as some Christians have opined. The knowledge that God loved man before man loved God is so obvious in Islam that we did not think we had to make it explicit. It is obvious because God obviously existed before His creation of the world and man. It is also evident in the very sacred formula that starts every chapter in the Holy Qurʾan but one, and that begins every single legitimate act of a Muslim’s entire life — Bism Illah Al-Rahman Al-Rahim, In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.
Indeed, there is a Hadith Qudsi (a holy saying
)¹ wherein God says that His Name is Al-Rahman (the Lovingly Compassionate
) and that the word for womb
(al-rahm) comes from His Name, thus implying that God created the world out of an internal overflowing of love. Indeed, creation out of Rahmah (Loving Compassion
) is also seen in the Holy Qurʾan in the beginning of the Sura of Al-Rahman, which says:
Al-Rahman / Has Taught the Quran / He has created Man / He has taught him speech. (Al-Rahman, 55:1-4)
In other words, the very Divine Name Al-Rahman should be understood as containing the meaning The Creator-through-Love,
and the Divine Name Al-Rahim should be understood as containing the meaning The Savior through Mercy.
(4) A Common Word
was not intended to exclude Judaism as such or diminish its importance. We started with Christianity bilaterally simply because Islam and Christianity are the two largest religions in the world and in history, and so in that sense, Islamic-Christian dialogue is the most critical; for there are about 2 billion Christians in the world and 1.5 billion Muslims, compared to 20 million Jews. But this demographic does not preclude Muslims from dialoguing with those of faiths other than Christianity, bilaterally or multilaterally, or even with those of no faith at all. Moreover, Muslims do not object to the idea of a Judeo-Christian tradition (even though Islam shares with Judaism and Christianity the same Abrahamic origins and traditions), nor to not being invited to all Jewish-Christian dialogues; so there is no need for Jews to feel excluded by a Muslim-Christian conversation. For that matter, there is no need for Christians to feel excluded by a Judeo-Islamic dialogue. We can all, however, understand the reason for Jewish fears about Christian-Muslim dialogue, and we note that Jewish observers have been invited attendees of the conferences in Yale and Cambridge.
(5) On the other hand, A Common Word
does not signal that Muslims are prepared to deviate from, or concede one iota of, any of their convictions in order to reach out to Christians — and we expect the reverse is also true. Let us be crystal clear: A Common Word
is about equal peace, not about capitulation.
(6) Neither does A Common Word
mean Muslims are going to facilitate foreign evangelism opportunities
in the Islamic world in the name of freedom of religion.
This topic is an extremely sensitive one with much bitter history, and it has the potential to create much tension between Christians and Muslims, just as it has between Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox, and Eastern Orthodox Christians. Our intention with A Common Word
is to focus on popular rapprochement and mutual understanding between Christians and Muslims.
(7) Some have suggested that framing our extended hand in the language of love
is such a concession, but assuredly this suggestion is not at all accurate, nor is it a concession
: rather, it has been a particular pleasure to be able to focus our initiative on this frequently underestimated aspect of our religion: the Grand Principle of Love. Indeed, the Holy Qurʾan uses over fifty near-synonyms for love; English does not have the same linguistic riches and