{"title":"Interreligious Dialogue: A Case Study Approach in Respect to the Vatican and the World Council of Churches","authors":"D. Pratt","doi":"10.1163/9789004444867_010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Interreligious dialogue and the promotion of interfaith relations is a feature of our times. During the twentieth century, global Christianity—as represented in an ecumenical sense by the Vatican and World Council of Churches (WCC)— reached a position wherein, initially, interreligious dialogue, subsequently also ‘interfaith relations’ to reflect a broader scope and agenda, became affirmed and embraced. This has been in no small measure due to the rising influence of Asian and African Christian leadership and engagement during the 20th century in respect of both the Vatican (e.g. Cardinal Francis Arinze) and the WCC (e.g. M.M. Thomas, Paul Devanandan, Wesley Ariarajah). In recent decades the term ‘World Christianity’ has come into vogue, almost eclipsing the term ‘ecumenical Christianity’ as the referent for world-wide Christianity. Whereas ecumenism—or the ecumenical movement—arose out of early 20th century ecclesial motivations to address questions of Christian mission and unity, the relative innovation of the ‘World Christianity’ appellation tends to transcend even the inclusiveness of ecumenism, at least in terms of institutional expression. It highlights the transcendental character of catholicity—that urgrund inclusivity that is a mark of what it means to be ‘members one of another’. All Christians everywhere, together form one vast global community, at least in some ideal sense. It is more than ecclesia; it finds a parallel in the Islamic notion of Muslims forming a single ummah. Building on Henry van Dusen’s conceptualisation of World Christianity as a quest to promote Christian mission and unity (Robert 2009), this contribution considers World Christianity to indicate this consciousness of belonging to a worldwide Christian oikoumene and sees the World Council of Churches and the Vatican, being “two extensive networks that knit together Christians from various parts of the world” (Cabrita and Maxwell 2017: 31), as key institutions that promote such a consciousness. Within this Christian oikumene there has been an increasing consciousness about ‘the religious other’ and about the","PeriodicalId":40931,"journal":{"name":"Journal of World Christianity","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2020-12-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of World Christianity","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004444867_010","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"RELIGION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Interreligious dialogue and the promotion of interfaith relations is a feature of our times. During the twentieth century, global Christianity—as represented in an ecumenical sense by the Vatican and World Council of Churches (WCC)— reached a position wherein, initially, interreligious dialogue, subsequently also ‘interfaith relations’ to reflect a broader scope and agenda, became affirmed and embraced. This has been in no small measure due to the rising influence of Asian and African Christian leadership and engagement during the 20th century in respect of both the Vatican (e.g. Cardinal Francis Arinze) and the WCC (e.g. M.M. Thomas, Paul Devanandan, Wesley Ariarajah). In recent decades the term ‘World Christianity’ has come into vogue, almost eclipsing the term ‘ecumenical Christianity’ as the referent for world-wide Christianity. Whereas ecumenism—or the ecumenical movement—arose out of early 20th century ecclesial motivations to address questions of Christian mission and unity, the relative innovation of the ‘World Christianity’ appellation tends to transcend even the inclusiveness of ecumenism, at least in terms of institutional expression. It highlights the transcendental character of catholicity—that urgrund inclusivity that is a mark of what it means to be ‘members one of another’. All Christians everywhere, together form one vast global community, at least in some ideal sense. It is more than ecclesia; it finds a parallel in the Islamic notion of Muslims forming a single ummah. Building on Henry van Dusen’s conceptualisation of World Christianity as a quest to promote Christian mission and unity (Robert 2009), this contribution considers World Christianity to indicate this consciousness of belonging to a worldwide Christian oikoumene and sees the World Council of Churches and the Vatican, being “two extensive networks that knit together Christians from various parts of the world” (Cabrita and Maxwell 2017: 31), as key institutions that promote such a consciousness. Within this Christian oikumene there has been an increasing consciousness about ‘the religious other’ and about the
宗教间对话和促进宗教间关系是我们这个时代的特征。在二十世纪,全球基督教——以梵蒂冈和世界基督教协进会(WCC)的大公主义意义为代表——达到了这样一种地位:最初,宗教间对话,随后,反映更广泛范围和议程的“宗教间关系”,得到了肯定和接受。这在很大程度上是由于20世纪亚洲和非洲基督教在梵蒂冈(如红衣主教弗朗西斯·阿里泽)和世界基督教协进会(如M.M.托马斯、保罗·德瓦南丹、韦斯利·阿里阿拉贾)方面的领导和参与的影响力不断上升。近几十年来,“世界基督教”一词开始流行起来,几乎使“普世基督教”一词黯然失色,成为全球基督教的代名词。然而,普世主义——或普世运动——起源于20世纪早期教会的动机,以解决基督教使命和团结的问题,“世界基督教”称谓的相对创新倾向于超越普世主义的包容性,至少在制度表达方面。它突出了天主教的超越性——迫切的包容性,这是“彼此的成员”的标志。世界各地的基督徒聚集在一起,形成了一个巨大的全球社区,至少在某种理想意义上是这样。它不仅仅是教会;它在伊斯兰教中发现了一个类似的概念,即穆斯林形成一个单一的乌玛。在Henry van Dusen将世界基督教概念化为促进基督教使命和团结的追求(Robert 2009)的基础上,这一贡献认为世界基督教表明了这种属于全球基督教集体的意识,并将世界教会协会和梵蒂冈视为“两个广泛的网络,将来自世界各地的基督徒联系在一起”(Cabrita and Maxwell 2017: 31),作为促进这种意识的关键机构。在这个基督教世界中,有一种关于“宗教他者”的意识在不断增强