Mollie Hemingway is one of the very best religion reporters in the United  
States.
And here is an article that goes directly to the heart of the issue of  
interfaith
co-operation.
.
Here in Eugene there are interfaith services every month at First Christian 
 Church
( Disciples of Christ ), headed by Pastor Valdimir Lenin.  These  services 
are 
telecast locally and once in a while I watch at least part of the  
proceedings.
But I never view everything ;   it is too  depressing and morally sick.
.
Not that interfaith co-operation is a bad thing. It can be a great  thing.
As when a community's religious leaders meet in good will and decide
how to allocate resources for common good, with the Catholics, say,
providing food for the needy, Evangelicals operating a rescue  mission,
'mainstream' Protestants providing information services ( job search,
how to find health care, etc ), with all other religious  groups  providing
what they can. 
.
But joint "worship" can be a travesty.  It need not be. When a  tragedy
strikes a community what is wrong when each faith has its people 
offer prayers or consolation  at a memorial service ?  But by  definition
that should be in exceptional cases.  Otherwise, forget it.
.
Except in cases where doctrine and scriptures support serious interfaith  
actions.
And where participants actually are prepared and know the pitfalls, for  
example
Moslem attitudes that can wreck all common  faith approaches, or  when
some "exotic" faiths, like Theosophy, are present and compromise  everyone
else because of their "you're not serious, are you ? " beliefs.
.
But the compromised substitute for actual faith that one sees in  Eugene's
regular interfaith services are monuments to dishonesty,  make-believe,
and total unwillingness to as much as think about the fact that
most religious people have serious theological objections to
their form of "faith."  They refuse, on principle, to as much
as admit that anyone else can possibly have some other
view than their view. This is narrow-mindedness in
the extreme, all in the name of total open-mindedness.
.
So you can see the problem.
.
Anyway, really good article about an important subject.
.
Billy
.
.
.
 
 
 
 
Get Religion
 
Covering opposition to syncretism in a syncretized  world
February 8, 2013 By _mollie_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/author/mollie/)  
 
 
(http://wp.patheos.com.s3.amazonaws.com/blogs/getreligion/files/2013/02/CoexistMeaning.jpg)
  
There is nothing more fun about being a confessional Lutheran than 
explaining  _our position on  syncretistic worship_ 
(http://www.graceelgin.org/members/unionism.html)  to those who aren’t. 
I kid, it’s not fun at all. See, the world embraces syncretism. The general 
 idea is, it goes without saying, that all religions are good and valid and 
 different paths to understanding the same truth. If you don’t ascribe to 
that  notion, you are probably a bad guy. 
Civil religion has many components but one aspect is that it rather tries 
to  transcend all religions while including them. All religions and all gods 
are to  be equally tolerated, honored and respected everywhere. One of the 
most  important aspects of American civil religion is participation in 
interfaith — or  syncretistic — worship services. These worship services used 
to 
be more about  “unionism” — the blending of Christian worship — whereas 
now they explicitly  blend in groups that reject Christianity. It turns out 
that confessional  Lutherans not only don’t support unionism and syncretism 
but it’s a big part of  our story about how we came to America. The head of 
Germany was forcing joint  worship (with the Reformed Christians) on 
confessional Lutherans and we took our  doctrinal beliefs so seriously that we 
were 
forced to flee. 
It’s a very serious issue for us. And one that most of our fellow Americans 
 don’t understand (though they’ve graciously allowed us in and allowed us 
to  practice our doctrinal beliefs). 
We don’t do interfaith worship because of our understanding of the First  
Commandment, which is a demand for, as one of our scholars puts it, “a 
radical  and absolute exclusivity in our relationship with the realm of divine 
beings.”  And since the first duty of the believer is to worship, this is most 
clearly  expressed in how we worship. 
If you are a journalist who is genuinely interested in this topic and why 
we  believe what we do, I’d encourage the book “_The  Anonymous God: The 
Church Confronts Civil Religion and American Society_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/God-Confronts-Religion-American-Society/dp/0758608195) 
.”  It’s a highly 
readable, succinct explanation of our doctrines and how American  culture is 
hostile to our views. If you’re going for the quick and dirty  version, I’d 
recommend (sorry …) _my own Wall  Street Journal piece on the matter_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1027039669339206080.html)  the last time this 
became a big  issue in the media, after a clergy member was suspended for his 
participation in  interfaith worship: 
In late June, the church suspended the Rev. David Benke, the president of  
its Atlantic District and the pastor of a Brooklyn church, for praying with  
clerics who don’t share the Christian faith. 
Naturally, the suspension caused all hell to break loose. From the New York 
 Times’ editors to FoxNews’ Bill O’Reilly, pundits and commentators chided 
the  Lutherans for their intolerance. Mr. O’Reilly, not otherwise known for 
 theological expertise, even accused the church of “not following Jesus.” 
A  column in Newsday said Mr. Benke’s accusers were “advocating religious  
isolationism.” … 
To participate in an interfaith service is, as the synod announced upon  
suspending Mr. Benke, “a serious offense” strictly forbidden by tradition and 
 church law. But the source of the prohibition is Christ’s own words. “I 
am the  way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except 
through Me”  (John 14:6). As the Rev. Charles Henrickson, a Lutheran minister 
in 
St. Louis,  explains: “The gospel is not served, it is not confessed — 
indeed, the gospel  is eviscerated — when Jesus Christ is presented as one of 
many options from  which to choose on a smorgasbord of spirituality.”
Basically we think it’s fine to set aside differences to work together in  
many things unless the thing we’re supposed to agree to disagree on is Jesus 
 and the context is worship. 
Another issue arose when a Lutheran pastor who everyone agrees is doing a  
great job ministering to his congregation in Newtown in all sorts of ways 
took  part in a syncretistic worship service. He explained why he thought it 
was ok,  but many Lutherans thought it not, it was becoming a bit of a “
scandal” (in the  church sense of the term), and his supervisors asked him to 
speak a word of  apology. He did. The President basically told both the people 
who thought his  apology didn’t go far enough and those who want to change 
church teaching on  syncretism that they should work together in love and 
compassion. While it’s not  a huge issue within the church body, some folks 
have been pushing for secular  media coverage of same since that’s a much more 
favorable climate for changing  church teaching on this matter. 
So if you thought it was less than enjoyable to have your patriotism  
questioned after 9/11, you can imagine how easy it is to explain your church  
doctrine on the First and Second Commandments in the subtle and unpolarized  
aftermath of the Newtown massacre. The headlines and stories have been full of 
 outrage. Some of that is to be expected for anything as countercultural as 
our  doctrine on this matter. Some of it is _just  not the best work_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/newtown-pastor-reprimanded-prayer-vigil-184307
29) . 
Or as Vanity Fair‘s _Kurt  Eichenwald_ 
(https://twitter.com/kurteichenwald/status/299663332166733824)  put it: 
Truth: Lutherans angry at minister 4 praying w/ a Rabbi 4 a dead Jewish boy 
 wouldve been angry 4 prayers at the Crucifiction of Jesus, a Jew 

I’m sure that whatever our differences on this matter, our favorite part of 
 that tweet is the spelling of Crucifixion. But Eichenwald’s Bill O’
Reilly-level  of theological acumen is off the mark. Would we worship at Jesus’ 
Crucifixion  with those who worshiped a different God? We would consider it 
something of an  ontological impossibility. Not that I necessarily expect most 
reporters to even  understand what I mean by that. 
So first and foremost, I will say to you what I said to the New York  Times‘
 Mark Oppenheimer when he sent out a mildly snarky tweet about my  church 
body’s doctrine. If you are a reporter and you have any questions about  our 
doctrines, feel free to ask me about it. I know that the Newtown  pastor, 
his District President and the Synodical President have all agreed not  to 
speak with the media. Further, those who are eager to speak on the matter  are, 
quite understandably, those seeking to change the church position. That  
makes it very difficult to understand support for a topic that is already  
probably hard for you to understand. I’m just a layperson with no formal  
theological training, but I have read up on syncretism and our church teaching  
on the matter and am happy to do my best to explain this doctrinal topic that 
is  so far outside the mainstream of American religious expression. Perhaps 
I can  point you to authors whose works I’ve read or to church historians 
who can  explain the controversy. 
As _one Lutheran pastor_ (http://steadfastlutherans.org/?p=26762)   put it: 
The national media have picked up on LCMS President Matthew Harrison’s  
response to the participation of Pastor Robert Morris in an interfaith prayer  
service in Newtown, Connecticut. The interfaith service took place on 
December  16, a _letter from Pastor Morris_ 
(http://wmltblog.org/2013/02/letter-from-pastor-robert-morris-newtown-ct/)  
regarding his participation was  
issued on January 31, and a _letter from President Harrison_ (http://w
mltblog.org/2013/02/letter-from-president-harrison-on-newtown-ct/)  on his 
handling of 
the  situation was issued on February 1. Now, in the last 24 hours, an 
_article by Caleb Bell of Religion News Service (RNS)_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/on-faith/lutheran-pastor-apologizes-for-praying-at-newtown-vigi
l/2013/02/06/0dfeffc2-7091-11e2-b3f3-b263d708ca37_story.html) ,  “Lutheran 
pastor apologizes for praying at Newtown vigil,” has appeared in the  
Washington Post and other news outlets. And an _article by Rachel Zoll of 
Associated Press (AP)_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/newtown-pastor-reprimanded-prayer-vigil-18430729)
 , “Newtown  Pastor Reprimanded Over Prayer Vigil,” 
has appeared on ABC News and  elsewhere… 
Of course, do not expect the coverage and commentary to understand or  
approve of what is going on. Even though, in my view, President Harrison’s  
letter is excellent, and his handling of the situation has been very balanced  
and pastoral–both evangelical and confessional–the media voices will not “
get  it.” To disapprove of interfaith services in our day is unpopular. It 
goes  against American civil religion and political correctness. The prevailing 
 notion in our culture is that “all roads lead to God,” and the spiritual  
smorgasbord that interfaith services offer falls right in line with that 
false  belief. Even if a clergy participant is well-intentioned, and his 
portion of  the service contains no false doctrine per se, the unavoidable 
effect 
is to  support the “whatever works for you” overarching message.
Anyway, I wanted to also note that the New York Times handled this  story 
well (“_Lutheran  Minister Explains Role in Sandy Hook Interfaith Service_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/08/nyregion/lutheran-pastor-explains-role-in-sa
ndy-hook-interfaith-service.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130208) “
). It may come off  as harsh to some of us who are confessional Lutheran, 
but it is a reasonable  presentation of the issues.

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