On
Monday I was a guest alongside Imam Samer Altaaba on Fox Talk 950, a local
morning radio talk show. We were invited on to discuss the need for increased
Muslim-Christian relations in the wake of the violent Middle East uprisings
which ended in the murders of Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other
Americans in Libya. (A link to an audio recording of the interview is
available at http://www.centralmediaserver.com/kjtv/radio/monftim2.mp3 until next Monday.)
The imam has condemned the embassy attacks and similar acts of violence. Like
most Muslims, he is a person of peace and goodwill. Unfortunately,
religious extremists and political opportunists overshadow the vast majority of
Muslims. I hoped the interview would help Lubbock hear another voice.
In our conversation I spoke about a man named Krister Stendahl, a Lutheran
priest who served as Dean of Harvard Divinity School and did much to promote
inter-religious dialogue last century. Stendahl said that when we enter into
conversations with people of other faiths we should follow three principles.
1. We should
listen to them directly — not to their enemies.
2. We should
not compare our own religion's best to the others' worst. This would help us come
to terms with the fact that all religions have their good and their bad, their
exemplars and their extremists.
3. We should
seek what Stendahl called "Holy Envy." By this he meant we
should look to others' religious devotion and practices and seek to find in
them what might inspire our own.
The conversation with the imam went well. We told stories of our own
friendship and spoke of ways our two communities have remained open to each
other in these turbulent times. At the conclusion of the interview I
talked about losing Ambassador Stevens and our need to honor his sacrifice by
seeking to be ambassadors of goodwill ourselves. For with half of humanity
being either Christian or Muslim, the fate of the world depends upon it.
But perhaps most gratifying about the experience was the Facebook message I
received afterward. It was from Justin Gornto, one of the kids in the youth
group I once pastored in North Carolina. Justin grew up and joined the Army. He
served a tour in Afghanistan, where he was wounded and almost lost his life in
an IED attack. Justin learned about the interview on Facebook and streamed it
from North Carolina. He wrote me to tell me he appreciated the conversation and
hopes for more like it.
As I read that note from Justin a wave of hope washed over me. Justin knows
first hand how dangerous these days are; yet he remains open to the possibility
— indeed necessity — of peacemaking.
In the midst of so much violence, terror, and death, it was a real sprig of
life.
-Ryon Price
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