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TOWARDS INTEGRATION
In looking for integration, many question what it means to be a Christian. Many realize that, essentially, being a Christian has little to do with creed and all to do with remaining faithful to the teachings of Jesus Christ. Fr Saldanha sees this as "loving God and one's neighbor and striving to live in union with Christ". Such a definition eliminates all conflict between nationality and religion. When you love your neighbor in the true Christian sense, you cannot withhold her/his right to live or worship her/his way.
Few have carried this examination to as rigorous lengths as Russian writer and mystic Leo Tolstoy. In his The Kingdom of God and Peace Essays, he repudiates the entire superstructure of western civilization as being incompatible with the teachings of Christ. Using Christ's injunction to resist not evil, he points out the incongruity of Christian nations with military institutions or law courts. He says: "Christianity, in its true sense, puts an end to the State." Arguing against the association of Christ with Christianity, he says: "In our time it has reached its logical climax... in a demand for blind belief, not in God or in Christ, or even in the teaching, but in a person (as in Catholicism) or in several persons (as in the Orthodox Greek faith) or in a book (as in Protestantism). So... a man no longer believes in God or in Christ as they have been revealed to him, but in what the Church commands him to believe in."
This insistence on belief as opposed to experience is perhaps the greatest limitation of the way Christianity has been interpreted. Christ himself was totally opposed to organized religion. He had thrown the moneychangers out of the temple. There are other anomalies too—inability to blend with other faiths, exclusivity and sectarianism. Even in India, many find themselves squirming under questions raised by Christianity. Siddhartha, a Buddhist, was born a Syrian Christian. Christened George Kurien, he was uncomfortable with the exclusive aspects of Christianity. Says he: "Christianity is scared of losing itself if it gets into a close dialogue with Hinduism and Buddhism." The externalization of faith makes Christians unable to plumb into the living center of all religions, where alone lies synthesis.
CHRIST FOREVER
And yet, almost all the people interviewed for this article remain ardent Christians. What draws them to the faith? Vandana Mataji speaks for many: "I fell in love with Jesus Christ. I became a Christian because I found him fantastic." At the living heart of the faith is the person of Jesus Christ—a towering figure of love, compassion, and wisdom. How does one remain unmoved by his preference for the poor, the prostitute and the publican? How to remain unchanged by his injunction to love the other enough to turn the other cheek?
Writes Tolstoy: "The Christian teaching consists in indicating to man that the essence of his soul is love, that his happiness comes not because he loves this or that man but because he loves the source of all, God, whom he recognizes in himself through love, and so this love will extend to all men and also all things." Those who take the trouble to struggle out of the conventional truisms of Christianity and discover its spiritual core, which Tolstoy calls "progress along the appointed path towards inward perfection by an imitation of Christ, and towards outward perfection by establishment of the kingdom of God" become much more tolerant. Says Fr Fernandes: "There is only one God. Let us have a worship where we can all come together." |
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THE ROAD AHEAD
If inculturation reaches its logical conclusion, what kind of Christianity can we expect? Upadhyay had long postulated a Christianity, where "Christian truths" are "formulated through Vedantic (ancient Indian scriptures) thought".
Adds Raimondu Pannicker, author of A Dwelling Place for Wisdom: "If we as Christians... could succeed in undergoing the Advaitic experience... then Christians, at least of Indian origin, would be automatically enabled to live an advaitic-Christian faith, which makes possible both a fully Hindu and a fully Christian life—without the pain of a split personality."
Advaitic Christianity sounds rather good. When Christianity can become one more Indian sect, such as Jainism or Sikhism, seeking union with God through Jesus Christ, yet with an undisturbed fidelity to the cultures and lifestyle of the land, inculturation will have completed its task.
But inculturation is still to penetrate the masses. Says Fr Gonsalves: "The European missionaries in the past have instilled an aversion in the minds of the Indian Christian to whatever smacks of Hinduism." Brought up to believe that salvation lies solely within the church and to think otherwise is blasphemy, it is not easy for Christians to shed the conditioning of a lifetime.
Another factor inhibiting this delicate process of expansion is the aggressive anti-Christian stand adopted by fundamental Hindu organizations. Inculturation will integrate Christianity within the Indian ethos, but it must be allowed to happen in its own pace. Changes are occurring—slowly but surely.
Much of the West itself has already penetrated the value of Indian spirituality. It won't be long before Indian Christians do likewise and take back their own heritage with pleasure and gratitude.
CHRISTIAN ASHRAMS:
SANCTUARY FOR THE SOUL
Nowhere is the impact of inculturation more evident than in India's 50-odd Christian ashrams. A pioneer here is Bede Griffiths, a British Benedictine monk who recognized the profundity of Indian philosophy and pursued its integration with Christianity. Along with another monk, he set up the Kurusumala ashram in Kerala before taking over the Shantivanam ashram in Tamil Nadu.
Shantivanam was started by two French priests who adopted Indian names, wore saffron, and lived spartan lives. Under Griffith, the ashram became a melting pot of Hindu and Christian thought with emphasis on contemplation.
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FOR THE LOVE OF THE CROSS By M.P.K. Kutty |
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“ Ours was a middle-class Hindu household that followed Hindu rituals as a matter of course. I was educated in Christian institutions, but was never influenced by their religious practices. Yet I believed in a God whose goodwill was necessary for my well-being. Once, during a religious convention I had accidentally landed in, a pastor invited me to attend the Sunday morning prayer meetings at his house. His sermons motivated me to read the Bible more closely. Thus I clearly saw that the human heart is desperately wicked or that "all have sinned and come short of the glory of God". There was a quality of divine wisdom in these pronouncements.
“Later I also learnt that some great people disagreed with the concept of sin or accused Christianity of coercing people into believing by the promise of heaven and the threat of hell. But I feel philosophizing about right and wrong only blunts man's capacity of moral distinction. Christ offered us, in his Sermon on the Mount, the mysterious prospect of dying in order to live, and turned all the world's values upside down. The decision to take up the cross is also a decision to consider as "rubbish" what the world trumpets as important.
“ To me, this sermon represents the blueprint for leading a good life. His death and resurrection are central to my faith. Crucifying the self is not easy. I recognize that without His Spirit working in me, I cannot love my enemies. Also, to remain small and poor in a world that worships power and riches is hard. But then, the crux of Christian teaching remains imprinted in my mind: "For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for My sake and the gospel's, the same shall save it...” |
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