salam

sungguh menarik artikel yang ditulis oleh Romo Tom Michel, sebuah 
ulasan lugas yang menjelaskan tentang inti sebenarnya dari pemahaman 
Tuhan dalam Kristen yang dikaitkan dengan pemahaman monotheisme yang 
ada dalam Islam. dengan mempertemukan kesamaan, dan tidak mencari 
perbedaan yang bisa dijadikan alat permusuhan, maka hal ini bisa 
menjadi satu titik pertemuan dari dua kutub yang 'berbeda'.

selamat menjalankan ibadah bulan Ramadhan bagi sekalian orang-orang 
yang islam dan beriman.


salam

Qisai

AMU, Aligarh
India


--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> Menjelang Ramadhan, ada baiknya artikel menarik dari Romo Tom 
Michel ini
> kita baca.
> 
> Selamat membaca.
> 
> =============================================
> Do Muslims And Christians Worship The Same God?
> 
> UCAN Column "Muslim-Christian Relations"
> by Jesuit Father Tom Michel
> 
> VATICAN CITY (UCAN) -- The Second Vatican Council teaches that 
Muslims
> "adore the one God, living and subsisting in Himself; merciful and
> all-powerful, the Creator of heaven and earth, who has spoken to 
humans.
> They take pains to submit wholeheartedly to even God's inscrutable
> decrees."
> 
> Pope John Paul II has said the fact that Christians and Muslims 
worship
> "the
> One and same God" is a factor that draws the two communities 
together and
> lays the basis for love and cooperation between the two communities 
of
> believers. But some Christians and Muslims question whether Allah 
and God
> are the same deity.
> 
> Allah is the name by which Muslims and Arab Christians have for 
centuries
> called upon the One God. Ancient inscriptions in the Arabian 
peninsula seem
> to indicate that Christians in Arabia already referred to God 
as "Allah"
> before the time of Muhammad. The word Al-lah literally means "The 
God" and
> is the equivalent of ho theos, the Greek term used in the New 
Testament to
> refer to God. In Arabic translations of the Bible, the name Allah 
is always
> used to translate ho theos.
> 
> Over the centuries, Arab Muslims and Christians have disagreed over 
many
> issues, both religious and political, but they have never accused 
one
> another of worshiping different gods. Moreover, the people of 
Malta, an
> almost 100% Catholic country whose language is similar to Arabic, 
also call
> God "Allah," even in the prayers of the Christian liturgy.
> 
> Some Christians have objected that since Muslims' understanding of 
God is
> not Trinitarian, how can the God of Muslims and Christians be one 
and the
> same. One could ask the same question about the great figures of 
the Old
> Testament -- Abraham, Moses, Isaiah or Jeremiah -- whose 
understanding of
> God was not Trinitarian, or even of figures like John the Baptist 
and Mary
> in the New Testament. They all worshiped the one God of "Abraham, 
Isaac and
> Jacob" and sought to do God's will. It was only later Christian 
reflection
> that arrived at an understanding of the One God as Trinity.
> 
> Just as Christians would never claim that Abraham, Moses and John 
the
> Baptist worshiped a different God because they did not understand 
God's
> Triune nature, so it would be wrong for a Christian to claim that 
Allah
> worshiped by Muslims is not the God of Christians.
> 
> It is not only Christians who question whether the two communities 
worship
> the same God. Some Muslims accuse Christians of worshiping three 
gods. This
> is based on the view that the Christian doctrine of "one God in 
three
> persons" constitutes a kind of committee, a sort of "division of 
labor"
> among three individuals who share in the work of creating, saving 
and
> judging humankind.
> 
> All theologians and Church teachings agree that this is a 
misunderstanding
> of Christian faith, yet Muslims may be excused for holding this 
distorted
> view, for that is the way the Christian doctrine has often been 
presented
> to
> them. The ancient Councils of the Church like those of Nicea, 
Ephesus and
> Chalcedon actually defined Christian faith as holding "one God in 
three
> hypostases." That Greek word is often rendered as "persons" but 
according
> to
> Karl Barth, a leading Lutheran theologian of the past century, it 
means "a
> way of being." According to Karl Rahner, one of the Catholic 
Church's most
> important theologians in recent times, it is "a mode of 
subsisting" -- that
> is, a way of being and acting.
> 
> In other words, Christian faith affirms one God who has three 
essential,
> eternal ways of being and acting. The one eternal God has an eternal
> Message, a Message that Christians believe God expressed perfectly 
in the
> person of Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus "incarnated" that Message in 
that it
> became visible in him, in the way he lived and what he taught.
> 
> But this same God actually lives and moves in all creation. From the
> smallest sub-atomic particle of molecular science to the driving 
force
> behind super-galaxies, there is always something that is not 
measurable or
> "quantifiable," because it is divine. That "something," that divine 
spark,
> is God's transcendent presence in all things, constantly guiding, 
teaching,
> encouraging. Christians call that divine presence the Holy Spirit.
> 
> The Trinity, then, is a way of affirming that the one God does not 
remain
> distant from human history or outside the created world, but has 
these two
> "ways" or "modes" of being present and active. In a Trinitarian
> understanding, God need not have recourse to created mediators like 
angels
> or books, for God's ways or modes are themselves divine. As such, 
the
> Christian belief could be said to be the "radicalization of 
monotheism."
> 
> Does this mean that Christians and Muslims are simply saying the 
same thing
> in different words? Not at all. Islam and Christianity are two 
different
> religions and have different teachings, and God is able to save 
both Muslim
> and Christian if they faithfully follow their respective paths. 
What it
> means, though, is that both are directing their attention and 
service and
> love toward the same merciful and compassionate God. Kenneth Cragg, 
former
> Anglican archbishop of Jerusalem, used a grammatical image to 
describe the
> relationship between the Christian and Islamic understanding of 
God: "On
> the
> subject [God], we agree; on the predicates, we disagree."
> 
> What does it mean, practically speaking, that Muslims and Christians
> worship
> "the one and same God"? It means, for one thing, that the two 
communities
> are not rivals or enemies. When Christians hear Muslims being 
called to
> prayer, they should be happy, for it is their God who is going to be
> worshiped and served. When they see good Muslims performing the 
prayer,
> fasting in Ramadan, and doing good works like giving to the poor,
> Christians
> should praise God for the fact that so many of their Muslim sisters 
and
> brothers are doing God's will.
> 
> Similarly, Muslims can regard Christians as fellow monotheists with 
whom
> they share some of the most basic orientations to life. They need 
not
> regard
> Christians as kafirs (unbelievers) or mushriks (pagans). Like 
Muslims, good
> Christians want to submit their lives to God, just as do Muslims. 
Jesus'
> preaching revolved about the "kingdom of God" -- that is, what a 
person's
> life is like when God rules and governs every aspect of it.
> 
> Isn't there a deep point of contact between real submission, true 
islam,
> and
> the commitment to accept God as the sovereign ruler of one's life 
and
> destiny? Is it this point of contact to which the Qur'an was perhaps
> referring when it stated: "And you will find that the closest in 
affection
> to those who believe [Muslims] are those who say, 'We are 
Christians,' for
> among them are priests and monks, and they are not arrogant" 
(Qur'an 5:82).
> 
> The one God to whom we submit our lives wants all, Christian and 
Muslim, to
> reject arrogance and to come before Him together, so that God can 
govern
> our
> societies according to His will.
> 
> -----
> 
> Jesuit Father Tom Michel is Ecumenical Secretary of the Federation 
of Asian
> Bishops' Conferences and Secretary of the Jesuits for Interreligious
> Dialogue.
> 
> =====================
> "If I could be anyone in the world,
> I'd choose to be me, when I am right now"
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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