God Is Not a Christian
By Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Reader Supported News
02 June 11
The following is excerpted from the Archbishop
Desmond Tutu's new book, "God
Is Not A Christian: And Other Provocations." This talk also comes from a
forum in Britain, where Tutu addressed leaders of different faiths during a
mission to the city of Birmingham in 1989.
They tell the story of a drunk who crossed the street and accosted a
pedestrian, asking him, "I shay, which ish the other shide of the shtreet?" The
pedestrian, somewhat nonplussed, replied, "That side, of course!" The drunk
said, "Shtrange. When I wash on that shide, they shaid it wash thish shide."
Where the other side of the street is depends on where we are. Our perspective
differs with our context, the things that have helped to form us; and religion
is one of the most potent of these formative influences, helping to determine
how and what we apprehend of reality and how we operate in our own specific
context.
My first point seems overwhelmingly simple: that the
accidents of birth and geography determine to a very large extent to what faith
we belong. The chances are very great that if you were born in Pakistan you are
a Muslim, or a Hindu if you happened to be born in India, or a Shintoist if it
is Japan, and a Christian if you were born in Italy. I don't know what
significant fact can be drawn from this - perhaps that we should not succumb too
easily to the temptation to exclusiveness and dogmatic claims to a monopoly of
the truth of our particular faith. You could so easily have been an adherent of
the faith that you are now denigrating, but for the fact that you were born here
rather than there.
My second point is this: not to insult the adherents of
other faiths by suggesting, as sometimes has happened, that for instance when
you are a Christian the adherents of other faiths are really Christians without
knowing it. We must acknowledge them for who they are in all their integrity,
with their conscientiously held beliefs; we must welcome them and respect them
as who they are and walk reverently on what is their holy ground, taking off our
shoes, metaphorically and literally. We must hold to our particular and peculiar
beliefs tenaciously, not pretending that all religions are the same, for they
are patently not the same. We must be ready to learn from one another, not
claiming that we alone possess all truth and that somehow we have a corner on
God.
We should in humility and joyfulness acknowledge that
the supernatural and divine reality we all worship in some form or other
transcends all our particular categories of thought and imagining, and that
because the divine - however named, however apprehended or conceived - is
infinite and we are forever finite, we shall never comprehend the divine
completely. So we should seek to share all insights we can and be ready to
learn, for instance, from the techniques of the spiritual life that are
available in religions other than our own. It is interesting that most religions
have a transcendent reference point, a mysterium tremendum, that comes
to be known by deigning to reveal itself, himself, herself, to humanity; that
the transcendent reality is compassionate and concerned; that human beings are
creatures of this supreme, supra mundane reality in some way, with a high
destiny that hopes for an everlasting life lived in close association with the
divine, either as absorbed without distinction between creature and creator,
between the divine and human, or in a wonderful intimacy which still retains the
distinctions between these two orders of reality.
When we read the classics of the various religions in
matters of prayer, meditation, and mysticism, we find substantial convergence,
and that is something to rejoice at. We have enough that conspires to separate
us; let us celebrate that which unites us, that which we share in common.
Surely it is good to know that God (in the Christian
tradition) created us all (not just Christians) in his image, thus investing us
all with infinite worth, and that it was with all humankind that God entered
into a covenant relationship, depicted in the covenant with Noah when God
promised he would not destroy his creation again with water. Surely we can
rejoice that the eternal word, the Logos of God, enlightens everyone - not just
Christians, but everyone who comes into the world; that what we call the Spirit
of God is not a Christian preserve, for the Spirit of God existed long before
there were Christians, inspiring and nurturing women and men in the ways of
holiness, bringing them to fruition, bringing to fruition what was best in all.
We do scant justice and honor to our God if we want, for instance, to deny that
Mahatma Gandhi was a truly great soul, a holy man who walked closely with God.
Our God would be too small if he was not also the God of Gandhi: if God is one,
as we believe, then he is the only God of all his people, whether they
acknowledge him as such or not. God does not need us to protect him. Many of us
perhaps need to have our notion of God deepened and expanded. It is often said,
half in jest, that God created man in his own image and man has returned the
compliment, saddling God with his own narrow prejudices and exclusivity, foibles
and temperamental quirks. God remains God, whether God has worshippers or not.
This mission in Birmingham to which I have been invited
is a Christian celebration, and we will make our claims for Christ as unique and
as the Savior of the world, hoping that we will live out our beliefs in such a
way that they help to commend our faith effectively. Our conduct far too often
contradicts our profession, however. We are supposed to proclaim the God of
love, but we have been guilty as Christians of sowing hatred and suspicion; we
commend the one whom we call the Prince of Peace, and yet as Christians we have
fought more wars than we care to remember. We have claimed to be a fellowship of
compassion and caring and sharing, but as Christians we often sanctify
sociopolitical systems that belie this, where the rich grow ever richer and the
poor grow ever poorer, where we seem to sanctify a furious competitiveness,
ruthless as can only be appropriate to the jungle.
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