Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


Why Did Jesus, Moses, The Buddha and Mohammed Cross the Road? Christian Identity in a Multi-Faith World 



As Brian McLaren points out, this is a question he only dares ask because of his faith in Christ

 

By Brian D. McLaren (2012)

Hodder and Stoughton
ISBN: 978-1444703672
Reviewed by: Andrew Starr


Why did JesusWe have no fear of reprisal from ‘our’ heavenly Father.  McLaren conjectures, whether Jesus, Moses, The Buddha and Mohammed would cross the road to meet?  If so, what would they discuss? He also challenges our sense of how exclusive ‘our’ concept of God is. Do we allow ‘our Father’, the god of Israel, to also be the maker of all people, all creation, spanning countless millennia?
 
McLaren, a pastor from Washington DC and regular speaker at the Greenbelt Arts festival, is a theologian who is interested in the practicality of ‘imitating Christ’ in our multicultural world.  He suggests that this must be driven by love if our witness is to be at all effective, and invents a new word, ‘with-ness’, to describe how we do this. Conditional friendships (I want you to change to be like me) are always likely to be strained. McLaren suggests we are able to ‘square this circle’ without watering down our faith and theology through what he calls ‘strong benevolence’.   He says that our religion has been tainted over the centuries with supremacy ideology, from the point when Christianity moved from persecuted, to persecutor. 
 
He feels our need for a ‘de-bugging’ of that which is not of Christ within us, is similar to our heart’s desire for all people of other faiths and none.  In this way, our approach is one of seeing blessing from contact with others, both within our tradition, and without, where the Holy Spirit’s work can transform all through the experience.

McLaren characterises the Church’s approach to multi-faith witness as creating a dissonance between ‘intelligence on ice’ and ‘ignorance on fire’.  He hopes we can find a middle way, based on imitating Christ.  I for one am with him.
 


Andrew Starr is a member of the Leicester Muslim-Christian Forum

 
    Post     Tweet
Polyphonic God, edited by Israel Oluwole Olofinjana, David Wise, Usha Reifsnider
'Approachable book raises a multitude of valuable questions. Are there silent voices in my church God wants me to hear from?'
Beloved is where we begin, by Rachael Newham
'Realistic and accessible devotional book, which recognises our desire for time with God can be impacted by many things'
A Song Among the Stones, by Kenneth Steven
Sequence of poems inspired by the incredible 7th-century voyage of Irish hermit monks from the island of Iona to the unknown shores of Iceland is 'a joy to read'
Sticky Note Prayers - How Prayer Spaces in Schools Are Changing Young Lives, by Phil Sokell-Miles
Powerfully shares the story of Prayer Spaces in Schools - an unfinished and ongoing account of how God is on the move
Worship and the Mystery of God, by John Shepherd
'Argues that beauty matters in worship, not merely as an embellishment of an otherwise essentially inward offering of the heart and mind, but as an embodiment of the divine presence and an expression of the transcendent'
Co-stars of the Acts of the Apostles, by Patrick Whitworth
A focus on the lesser known names in the book of Acts illustrates how their support and collaboration was crucial in the establishing of the early Church - and has lessons for churches today
    Posted: 24/10/2025
    Posted: 10/10/2025
    Posted: 18/07/2025
    Posted: 21/03/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast