Just Thinking…


passover
April 25, 2008 6:02 pm, 6:02 pm
Filed under: God, church, inter-faith, reflection, understanding

Last night I was at a Seder dinner. Its passover at the moment (one of the strange years where easter and passover are not at the same time).

This Seder was at a Jewish persons house and was attended my Christians, Muslims and Jews. It was fascinating.

We went through the passover story, which is in all 3 bibles (or sacred texts or whatever you want to call them) and ad some amazing conversations. I cant remember enough to be able to go into detail, the problem with really good conversations is that someone says something and you think ‘thats amazing, I hadnt thought of it like that, I need to think about that more” but then 2 mins later the same thing happens with something else and you lose the first one.

The only one that sticks in my head at the moment is that the Torah explains when Moses sees the burning bush and says he had to turn side on to see more clearly. We were talking about how useful that concept could be in life if we look at disputes or something and actually change our position to see more clearly.

I was also amazed at how similar so much stuff is across the three religions. The compassion, the love of God, the view that you have to stand up for what is right in the world. I apologise now if my spelling of these words are wrong, but for food to be kosher it means that it is also halal. So everyoene could eat the food that was served. The ideas presented in the dinner were great, things about removing all ego.

Well, I dont know what else to say really, but it was really cool. Im keen to participate in more of that kind of thing and learn more. Everyone there was so tolerant of each other, there is the basic understanding that our religions have the same roots – they all come from Abraham. There was respect that we are all people of faith and we are all spiritual people, so hurting or insulting someone was just not an option. It was fantastic.

I was at this other thing last week where the guy lecturing said that he didnt care if people ignored the rest of the bile, as long as they read the gospel. I didnt like it then, but I like it less now. If the bible is a way that we can see, learn and experience something of God, then that applies to the whole bible. And if we are going to understand the new testament properly, we need to understand the old testament too, because that is what is referenced and that is the culture and context that the new testament is set. That is (was) Jesus’ religion.


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I wonder about the importance of that link all three monotheistic faiths have with Abraham.On
the one hand he is the father of monotheism,but
wasn’t it the Pharisees who in the gospels felt
that because they descended from Abraham they’re
in God’s good books. Of course when you’re talk-
ing about coming from Abraham you’re talking ab-
out spiritual descent,that our faith, and that of
Jewish and Muslim people, originates with the rev-
elation of God given to Abraham. But how does the
revelation of God given to Abraham resemble that given to us in Jesus Christ? You’re absolutely right about The Old Testament-or Hebrew Bible as
I hope you called it when you were chatting with
your Jewish dinner friends :) -being the religious
background of Jesus and that in order to underst-
and the gospels we need to understand the Hebrew
Bible. I’ve been participating in a bible study on
St. Matthew’s Gospel and he quotes the Old Test-ament a lot, so that its incomprehensible without some knowledge of the O.T I wonder though if it’s not a more important teaching of the Christian faith and that of Jews and Muslims that we were all created by the One God whom we all worship,
rather than our spiritual descent from the faith
of Abraham? I can hear the Hindus and Buddhists
saying ‘our faith is not descended from Abraham,
so what about us? Are we outside your kingdom of
God?’ though I know Buddhists don’t believe in God
and Hindus believe in many (though I’ve read some
Hindu sacred texts The Bhagavad Gita and the prin-
ciple Upanishads, and I’m tempted to think they’ve
got quite a bit of knowledge of the Oneness of God
and his supreme goodness.

Comment by Luke




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