Showing posts with label Dearborn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dearborn. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 7, 2017

"Why Interfaith?" From an Interfaith Panel Discussion on May 6, 2017

"Why Interfaith?"

From an Interfaith Panel Discussion on May 6, 2017



Shalom....  Asalaamu alaikum…   Shanti…  Peace be to you all.

            I thought I’d start with a little history. Some of our local religious communities have been involved for years in interfaith endeavors.  So much of our interfaith work has been about relationships, so I’d like to talk about my experience with this.
            The congregation I serve--Littlefield Presbyterian Church-- has been involved in interfaith work since the late 1970’s. At this point, it’s one of the few remaining Protestant Christian churches in east Dearborn. 
            In the beginning, almost 90 years ago, it was a neighborhood church, in an area that was predominately Catholic. Over time, the neighborhood changed due to white flight and new neighbors moving in. Most of the new neighbors were Muslim. The congregation could have moved to the suburbs or closed, which is what some other churches did. But they did a mission study and decided they were called to stay where they were and be good neighbors to the people who were moving in, and to witness to God’s love where they were planted.  
            Littlefield called the Rev. William Gepford to help them in their “ministry of reconciliation”[1]  and to build mutual respect and understanding among Christians and Muslims, and over the years. Dr. Gepford was one of the pioneers in interfaith work in the metro Detroit area and beyond.
            In the early years, Littlefield invited their Muslim neighbors to a series of a gatherings, during which people got to know one another over meals and conversation.  Over time, they built relationships in the community and worked together on projects like the annual holiday food baskets that served up to 100 needy families.  Dr. Gepford worked with a team of interfaith leaders to plan the first interfaith Thanksgiving service, a tradition that continued many years until a number of communities were holding their own interfaith services.

            I was called to be the pastor of Littlefield in 1997  and became involved in the interfaith work.  When 9/11 happened, it gave many of us a renewed sense of urgency about nurturing our interfaith relationships.  
            Those first few days were fearful times.  The church put up a sign on the doors that said, “This is a Hate Free Zone,” and some of our neighbors asked if they could come in and pray.  We went to one anothers’ houses of worship to show our support.
           
            We continue to visit back and forth between churches and mosques, attending worship and meals and other events.  We offer one another care and support.  Our Muslim neighbors invite us to break the fast at Ramadan iftar meals.  We invite them to join us for our Christmas Eve Lessons & Carols service.
On the Sunday in September closest to the International Day of Peace, we hold a service of Interfaith Prayer for Peace.  We encourage people to practice “respectful presence,” which means that we participate in the parts we can, and listen respectfully and learn in other parts.[2]  We typically have a Jewish cantor, an Imam, and a Christian pastor, and we’ve also occasionally had someone from the Sikh or Buddhist community.  We experience elements from each tradition, and we pray together “with one voice” in a litany for peace in our communities, our nation, and the world. We make new friends over refreshments following the service.   

            Because Littlefield has worked to build relationships in the community, our Muslim neighbors trust us and send their kids to our annual Peace Camp in the summer. The kids build a neighborhood of peace and justice out of cardboard boxes, they sing songs of peace, and learn some peace-building skills. And we all make new friends.

            Our Dearborn Area Interfaith Network builds relationships and works together on some events.  On the first Thursday in May, we hold our annual National Day of Prayer Interfaith Prayer gathering.  Each January we sponsor an interfaith convocation in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King.
            Some years ago, when Terry Jones came to town to protest what he wanted to see as “sharia law” in Dearborn, he wanted to protest outside the Islamic Center of America.  Religious leaders from around the metro area gathered and encircled the mosque to show our support. 

            At a committee meeting a few days after our most recent interfaith service, several of our members talked about how grateful they are to live in Dearborn, to be neighbors and friends with people from Lebanon and Palestine and Bosnia and elsewhere. 
            As one of them said, “Isn’t following Jesus really all about love?” 
            I believe that’s true.  My Christian faith teaches me that “perfect love casts out fear.”[3]  When we get to know our neighbors, when we grow in understanding, we don’t need to be afraid of one another. 
            When we get to know each other, we discover how much we have in common.   As children of Abraham, Jews, Christians, and Muslims all worship the same God-- the God of mercy and compassion. We are all taught by our faith to love God and neighbor. We worship  the God who is one.   We are all "people of the book."   The "family tree" of our faith makes it apparent that we are family.  We're connected, all the way back to Adam and Eve, and we trace our ancestry back through Isaac and Ishmael to Abraham.     
            When we study history, we are aware of how each of our faith traditions has had a tendency to be exclusivist, and to believe that it has the only path to God.  But there have always been valued streams of thought which are very respectful of the religious behavior and ideas of other faith traditions.  I am glad to be a part of that movement.

            I’ve read a lot of helpful books on interfaith work. One I read recently is helpful:   The Interfaith Alternative: Embracing Spiritual Diversity. [4]   The author, Steven Greenbaum, talks about the concept of “right belief,” which he says has been an organizing principle of our spiritual paths for a very long time.  If a religious community believes that we have the only way, that we are the only chosen people, and that we follow the only right spiritual path, the result can be distrust, hatred and violence.   
             Greenbaum offers an interfaith alternative, which respects each spiritual path and recognizes what we all share in common:  the call to love and to be loving and compassionate.
            He suggests “Maybe dividing ourselves into righteous pockets of spiritual belief is not the best way to bring about love.”  We humans are great at building walls between ourselves and those who are different in some way. For too long, too many of us have been stuck in a paradigm that demands that we search for or protect the one “right belief.”  
            I think Greenbaum is right when he says Who has the right belief?” is the wrong question,  and that we need to be more concerned with a different question: How do we live as a result of our beliefs?”   We need to stop arguing about which religious tradition is “best” or “right” or “true,” and find ways to be in conversation with one another and to work together to honor God/Allah/Hashem or whatever we call the One God we worship, through works of compassion, mercy, and justice.

            How many of you know the story of “The Blind Men and the Elephant”?   It’s an Indian fable. We had a picture book version at our house when my son was young, and I bought a new copy recently.  The story originated in the Indian subcontinent and is widely known in many traditions, including Buddist, Jain, Hindu, and Sufi Muslim traditions.
            In various versions of the story, a group of blind men (or people in the dark) are led to an elephant to touch it, so they can learn what an elephant is like.  Each person feels a different part.  In some versions, their differences lead to violence, as each one is convinced he has it right and tries to dominate.  In some versions of the story, they stop shouting, start listening to each other, and work together to “see” the whole elephant. 
            I think it’s time we all become more conscious and more intentional about this.  It’s time we stop trying to defend our one right truth and find ways to be in conversation with those who may have experienced a different truth?    We need to heed the common call of all our religious traditions, the call to love and compassion.
            As we come to understand the depth of our neighbors' relationship with the God we both worship, we learn to respect and value their faith, even while we recognize and affirm our different paths.  

            For those of us who long for a better, more peaceful world, it’s painful to see so much of what’s going on-- to see the racism, Islamaphobia, and anti-Semitism in our world. We live in such a fearful time, and political rhetoric has magnified it. Fear breeds animosity and hate. Hatred breeds more fear. It’s a vicious cycle.  
It can feel overwhelming.

            Because I follow Jesus, whom I know partly as the “Prince of Peace,” I believe I am called to be a peace-maker. That means I need to be working for reconciliation and justice.  Working against racism… working to alleviate poverty… working to promote understanding between all God’s people.
            The more we come to know one another, the more we understand that we have common ground. A few years ago, a large number of Islamic scholars and leaders signed a document, A Common Word between Us and You, which affirms what we, as people of the book and children of Abraham, share in common.[5]
            A Common Word affirms the “Shema,”or the "Great Commandment" to love God completely and to love our neighbors as an important value we share in common. Wherever we find such common ground, it can help us find ways for us not only to live together, as good neighbors, in peace. It can help to deepen our friendship and help us to find ways to cooperate with one another and to work together in the public square for the common good. And we can leave a more just and peaceful world for our children and grandchildren.


[1] 2 Corinthians 5

[3] 1 John 4:18

[4] Steven Greenbaum, The Interfaith Alternative: Embracing Spiritual Diversity. (SkyLightPaths, 2015)


Sunday, February 5, 2017

Welcome and Justice for Immigrants and Refugees: A Moral and Faith Matter


Welcome and Justice for Immigrants and Refugees: 

A Moral and Faith Matter




In the diverse city of Dearborn, Michigan, we love one another as neighbors and live together in peace. So in the days following the executive order that limited travel for people from 7 majority Muslim countries, a local group, Forward Action Michigan / Dearborn decided that it was important to show solidarity with Muslim neighbors by standing together. Earlier in the week, I stood and spoke in solidarity with Muslim neighbors at a press conference at the Islamic House of Wisdom.  On Saturday, February 4, elected officials, civic and religious leaders and others gathered for a  STANDING TOGETHER FOR JUSTICE AND PEACE rally.  My remarks for these 2 events follow.

For many of us, this is a faith issue.  A moral issue.

In the Hebrew scripture lesson many Christians heard last Sunday, we heard the prophet Micah telling the people very clearly how people of faith are to live:  “Do justice. Love mercy. Walk humbly with God.”[1]

So it weighs heavily on my heart and on my conscience to know that our nation has placed an indefinite hold on admitting refugees who have fled Syria and elsewhere, people who have been in a vetting process that lasts 2 or 3 or more years, mostly women and children.

The Christian tradition shares the Hebrew scriptures with Judaism. In the Hebrew Scriptures, we are taught that we are to love those who sojourn with us. We are to treat them as natives, and we are not to oppress foreigners.[2]

As a Christian, I follow Jesus, who taught that the most important commandments are to love God and to love our neighbor as myself.[3]  For Christians, how we treat “the stranger” or “the other” is central to our faith and is seen as a test of our faith.  In the 25th chapter of Matthew, Jesus makes it clear that how we treat “the stranger” is how we treat him.  Also in Matthew 25, we hear our gospel telling us that the nations will be judged by how we treat those who are marginalized, including the stranger.[4]

When we are told that the executive order is simply a matter of fulfilling campaign promises, I remember how much that campaign was based on peoples’ fears, especially fear of those who are different. The truth is, when we live together in community, when we get to know each other, we learn that we have so much more in common than we have differences.  All of us whose ancestors were not Native American in heritage or brought to this country in chains are descendants of immigrants who came here to escape persecution or danger or hardship, to seek a better life for themselves and their children.

Those of us who live in diverse communities like the Dearborn area have learned that our neighbors and friends are loyal Americans who want the same things we all do:  to live in safety and peace, to make a decent living and provide for their families, to have their children get a good education.  We care for one another.  So we need to stand together in solidarity, because there is power in standing together. 

There are those in power who would like us to choose to live in fear of the other.  If we choose fear, they will convince us that we need a bigger and stronger military, we need war, we need more prisons, we need more walls, we need to keep people out of our country who are different and those who practice a different faith.

But my faith teaches us that we are commanded to love our neighbor and to welcome the stranger.  It also teaches that “There is no fear in love and that perfect love drives out fear.”[5] 

So we need to stand together, in love and respect, as friends and neighbors. We need to stand against injustice. We need to stand up for what is right and moral and just for all. 


Rev. Fran Hayes, Pastor
Littlefield Presbyterian Church
Convener of Dearborn Area Interfaith Network
February 4, 2017



[1] Micah 6:6-8
[2] Examples: Exodus 22:21, 23:9; Leviticus 19:33-34; Deuteronomy 10:17-19, 24:20-24; Jeremiah 22:3
[3] Matthew 22:38; Mark 12:28-34
[4] Matthew 25:31-46
[5] 1 John 4:18

Friday, September 11, 2015

Out of Ashes and Fear: Remembering 9/11 Fourteen Years Later



Throughout this non-stop busy day, I’ve been remembering 9/11 fourteen years ago.  I’d been doing some work from home with a morning show in the background before heading to the church office when the terrible, tragic events of the day began to unfold.  With a sick knot in my stomach, I gathered up my work bag and grabbed my 5-inch TV to carry to the office.  Like many of you, I was glued to the news that day, watching and praying. 

I remember one of my Muslim neighbors saying that day, “O, Fran.  We’re so sorry.”  As if my gentle, loving neighbors could have had anything to do with that act of terror.  They couldn’t comprehend what happened that day any more than I could—how anyone, in the name of God/Allah/religion/faith could perpetrate such a thing.

We sent out a group email to the church list, and a group of us gathered that evening in the sanctuary to search for a word from God in the midst of the pain and terror, to hold hands, to weep together, and to pray.

We received a poster via email that read, “This is a hate free zone.”  We printed several  and posted them on the church doors.  Over the next few days, Muslim neighbors, some of whom were staying very close to home until they felt safe, would ask if they could come into our Presbyterian church and pray.  Some of them lit candles for peace.  I think they all felt safe and welcome in our sanctuary.

During the weeks and months that followed, people of faith from the Dearborn area and beyond gathered together in various houses of worship, in churches and mosques.  We shared our grief and pain, heard religious and community leaders struggle to share some wisdom, prayed, and looked for a way to move forward in hope.

Out of the terrible loss of that day fourteen years ago, out of the ashes and fear came a new or renewed commitment to work together to build bridges of understanding in our communities.  Several of our local mosques held open houses and invited the neighborhood to come and learn more about Islam.  The church I serve, Littlefield Presbyterian Church, had the first of a series of Muslim-Christian Dialogue Days. We began with an interfaith worship service in the morning, a time for lunch and conversation, and afternoon presentations from religious and community leaders. 

As a result of the interfaith and peacemaking work by various congregations and our Dearborn Area Ministerial Association (later Dearborn Area Interfaith Network), we have grown and strengthened relationships.  These relationships helped us to work together to respond effectively as a community when outside anti-Muslim activists like Terry Jones, Acts 19, and the “Bible Believers” with their pig head on a stick came to town trying to cause dissension.

The Interfaith Prayers for Peace that we will hold on Sunday, September 20 at Littlefield Presbyterian Church is our latest effort to bring people together, to celebrate our unity and diversity, to find common ground, and to pray together for peace in our communities, in our nation, and the world.  All are welcome.