Rowan Williams says faith groups must promote trust not division
-30/03/06
In the face
Rowan Williams says faith groups must promote trust not division
-30/03/06
In the face of concern about religionís role in public life, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has said that faith communities across the world need to promote confidence and earn trust in order to face the common problems that confront the planet.
Speaking at a dinner in Washington DC, USA, during a major Christian-Muslim conference, Dr Williams told the guests that coming together meant addressing their differences seriously, but always in the context of their shared challenges.
ìWe have recognised that we have a common agenda; we can’t always say that we have identical convictions and certainly arenít aiming to iron out the differences and the difficulties of our convictions but this is a world in which no one religious community, no one nation, no one interest group can solve problems alone…î, he declared.
Continued the spiritual head of the worldís 77 million Anglicans: ìThe ecological crisis that our planet faces is one that is no respecter of religious difference and there is one planet on which we live, global warming is theologically uneducated; rising water levels do not discriminate between Christians, Muslims, Jews or anyone else.î
Guests at the dinner, including Arab ambassadors based in Washington, also heard Dr Williams describe as ìoutrageous, unjust and exceptionalî the death sentence passed on an Afghan Christian who had converted from Islam ñ and who has now been offered asylum in Italy.
Commented the Archbishop: ìNone of us could have imagined how topical the work of our conference would seem in the light of the very complex and tragic situation in Afghanistan, with the death sentence threatened to a Christian convert there.î
But Dr Williams also firmly warned against adopting cultural stereotypes in trying to approach such situations. The challenge, he said was to earn trust. And this meant building each otherís sense of security, not undermining it.
ìIt’s not just a matter of the Islamic world being asked to adopt uncritically a ëWestern-modelí, secular human rights framework with all the conceptual and practical problems that entails,î he explained, ìbut working out what it would be like to live in a world where different societies recognised the credibility, the justice and the legitimacy in each other because there were certain things they could be secure about; certain areas where they did not think they would come up against outrageous, unjust and exceptional threats such as the Afghan incident represents.î
Rowan Williams says faith groups must promote trust not division
-30/03/06
In the face of concern about religionís role in public life, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has said that faith communities across the world need to promote confidence and earn trust in order to face the common problems that confront the planet.
Speaking at a dinner in Washington DC, USA, during a major Christian-Muslim conference, Dr Williams told the guests that coming together meant addressing their differences seriously, but always in the context of their shared challenges.
ìWe have recognised that we have a common agenda; we can’t always say that we have identical convictions and certainly arenít aiming to iron out the differences and the difficulties of our convictions but this is a world in which no one religious community, no one nation, no one interest group can solve problems alone…î, he declared.
Continued the spiritual head of the worldís 77 million Anglicans: ìThe ecological crisis that our planet faces is one that is no respecter of religious difference and there is one planet on which we live, global warming is theologically uneducated; rising water levels do not discriminate between Christians, Muslims, Jews or anyone else.î
Guests at the dinner, including Arab ambassadors based in Washington, also heard Dr Williams describe as ìoutrageous, unjust and exceptionalî the death sentence passed on an Afghan Christian who had converted from Islam ñ and who has now been offered asylum in Italy.
Commented the Archbishop: ìNone of us could have imagined how topical the work of our conference would seem in the light of the very complex and tragic situation in Afghanistan, with the death sentence threatened to a Christian convert there.î
But Dr Williams also firmly warned against adopting cultural stereotypes in trying to approach such situations. The challenge, he said was to earn trust. And this meant building each otherís sense of security, not undermining it.
ìIt’s not just a matter of the Islamic world being asked to adopt uncritically a ëWestern-modelí, secular human rights framework with all the conceptual and practical problems that entails,î he explained, ìbut working out what it would be like to live in a world where different societies recognised the credibility, the justice and the legitimacy in each other because there were certain things they could be secure about; certain areas where they did not think they would come up against outrageous, unjust and exceptional threats such as the Afghan incident represents.î