A Second Look at the
Call to Dialogue with Muslims
By Fr. Eliseo 'Jun' Mercado, OMI
Graduate School - Notre Dame University
With the accession to the Papacy of the first non-European,
first from the ‘new world’ or the Americas, and first Jesuit in the person of
Most Rev. Jorge Mario Cardinal Bergoglio, the Archbishop of Buenos Aires,
Argentina, new and interesting era begins.
The very first choice of name (Pope Francis) tells, in a way, the
direction by which the present pontificate would take. The name Francis is after St. Francis of
Assisi (founder of the Franciscan movement) and not St. Francis Xavier, SJ.
I am personally excited by the choice of name. St. Francis of Assisi is not only known for
his humility and reform within the ‘corrupt’ medieval church but also as an
ICON of the interreligious relations, particularly with the Muslims.
It was NO accident that when Pope John Paul II began the
Church’s new look at the relationships between believers and communities in
1986, he chose Assisi as the locus of this new initiative. He invited prominent religious leaders to
Assisi to reflect and pray on the Message entrusted to them vis-à-vis the
imperative of peacemaking. Echoing the
Beatitude: ‘blessed are the peacemakers, they shall be called sons and
daughters of God’ (Mt. 5:9), Pope John Paul II told all people of goodwill that
‘peace is NOT an option but a duty’ for all believers.
The better-known discourse about St. Francis in the
relationship with the Muslims was the ‘Crusade of Peace’ as against the Crusade
of the Official Church and the Christian Kingdoms of Europe. St. Francis’ ‘crusade of peace’ was mainly
composed of the poor not to vanquish the Muslims but to journey to the Holy
Land as Pilgrims. This journey was
depicted in the famous panting by Giotto at the Basilica of St, Francis in
Assisi. The poor and unarmed Francis was
recognized by the Sultan and welcomed him to the throne room in the now famous
dialogue with the Sultan at Damietta. While the rest of the world treated the
Muslims as enemies, Francis called the Sultan as ‘BROTHER’.
Beginning with Francis, the Franciscan Mission in
the Holy Land and in the rest of Middle East has always been known as ‘Legatio
Pacis’ or Legation of Peace. This tells
us of the original ‘intent’ of Francis to treat everyone as brother or a sister
and each one should find a peaceful abode in any Franciscan mission. Every time Francis began his preaching, he
invoked Peace… saying: “the Lord gives you peace.” It is Peace and all good.
One of the lessons I give for the Badaliyya Movement is
about St. Francis as a Badal (Ransom or Substitute) in the path of interreligious
relations. St. Francis remains the Model of Christian
Witness in the world of Islam. The offer of St. Francis before the Sultan
at Damietta – the “Test of Fire” (Mubahalla) and his “crucifixion” (stigmata) at
Mt. Al-Verna are, today, read in the spirit of Badal (Ransom).
Frs. Charles de Foucault and Louis Massignon traveled “mystically” the
path of Badaliyya as inspired by St. Francis of Assisi. St.
Francis was a man of God. And
because he was a man of God, he always lived what was essential. So he was a simple, courteous and gentle to
everyone, like God in his mercy.
Today, Phenomenological
Manifestations of St. Francis to our epoch consist of the following:
- Emptiness.
It is born of a feeling of impotence. There is very little we can do to change
our life, our community and society. Finally there is really nothing
important…
- Loneliness. It is an experience of lack of contact
with nature and others in terms of friendship and gentleness. There is the
lack of courage to commit oneself.
- Fear. It is the fruit of
objective threats to life, to employment, to collective survival of
humanity in general.
- Anxiety. It has its origin in imagined fear, ignorance as to what one
ought to do, in whom to trust, and what to expect. When anxiety grips an entire society it
means that the whole society feels threatened and senses its approaching
end.
- Aggressiveness without objectives. It reveals a rupture with the norms of relationship without which
a society cannot be built or defended.
What results is anonymity and the loss of the meaning of the self,
that is, the worth and sacredness of human person.
From the above, Two
consequences ensue… first is Emptiness and second is Loss. It is
the loss of language of everyday communication, the loss of meaningful
relationship and the lack of vital relationship with nature and habitat.
St. Francis stands
for a new way of life with many and varied relationship to nature, to others,
to religions and to God. In St. Francis,
it has always been through Pathos, Sympathy and Eros – fraternal communication
and tenderness.
The manifestations
are:
- His Innocence
- His enthusiasm for nature
- His gentleness to all beings
- His capacity for compassion with the poor
and “confraternization” with all elements and even death itself.
To Be Saint
in the case of Francis, it is necessary to be human. And to be human, it is necessary to be
sensitive and gentle.
“Man knows as much
as he does.” Francis’s gentleness was demonstrated, especially in his human
relationship. He broke the rigidity of
the feudal hierarchy and called all persons as brothers and sisters. He himself was called “little brother”
(fratello). He wanted to unite great
and small, to treat the wise and simple with brotherly affection, to bind with
tie of love those who were held at a distance.
He treated everyone with outmost courtesy, even Saracens, Infidels and
thieves.
I hope and pray, that
the new Pope Francis would turn a new page not only in the ways the Church
relates to the poor but also in the way she looks at people with peoples of living
faiths outside of Christianity. The name
itself is refreshing to inject new blood and elan to Christian and Muslim
relations, in particular.
Post the
famous Muslim letter also known as the Common Word, there are only two things
that bind all peoples of God – the Love of God and the love of neighbor. Pope Francis, both in word and deeds, invites
all to take that second look at the call to dialogue and fellowship between and
among peoples of living faith amid the World that is known as the “regio dissimilitudinis” and behind these
dissimilarities are camouflaged injustices and violence.
The peace
that we ought to proclaim in word and deed should always be present in our
hearts. Let no one be provoked by us to
anger or scandal, but rather let all through humility and gentleness be led to
peace, tranquility and fellowship. “BE
KINDER WITH YOUR NEIGHBORS.”
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