Christians and Muslims: Shall We Dance?

HouseofHopeKidsThere is no doubt that the global relationship between Christianity and Islam is strained.  Although both are monotheistic faiths (religions that worship only one God) who share much of their history and family lineage (all the way back to Abraham), there have been many political, cultural and social realities over the years that have driven their followers away from each other rather that towards one another.  
 
Many Christians quickly associate Muslims with terrorists who instigate heinous crimes among unknowing civilians in the West. 
 
Many Muslims quickly associate Christians as power hungry imperialists who kill hundreds of thousands of civilians in the Arab world to benefit their political agenda.  
 
While these events have tragically happened in our lifetime, they CANNOT be our primary lenses through which we view one another.  Not only is it inaccurate to the majority of the followers within each faith, it is reduces our ability to pursue genuine relationship.   
 
When we buy in to the political rhetoric, polarizing ideology and blind prejudice we lose our ability to have a divine imagination for what God desires for humanity. When we fail to view others primarily through the lens of a shared humanity and as co-image bearers, we miss out on sacred Kingdom moments.  We lose our ability to be agents of reconciliation and miss out the some of the best work God is seeking to do in and through his people.  
 
What Do We Do?
 
We listen 
 
When in doubt on how to better love someone with a different worldview or religion than you, it is safe to say that our first response should always be to listen.  Whether we admit it or not, we have all acquired presuppositions, stereotypes (some accurate; others not at all) and expectations that we project onto people.  We must first choose the posture of a humble learner who willingly sets aside misinformation we carry with us so we can begin to reform our worldview in light of genuine, human interaction.
 
We choose relationship
 
When you physically know and have relationship with someone of a different faith, it changes everything about how you understanding and engage the faith and its followers.  When we fail to allow for the nuance and complexities that exist in real time interactions we undermine and undervalue the dynamics of real life relationship.  You will quickly find that those with the strongest opinions who demonize and stereotype others are the very same people who don’t have any interaction or friendship with the people they demonize.  As they should, relationships offer the type of grid through which we can genuinely love and be loved.  
 
We seek forgiveness 
 
We have to come clean with the fact that the worst of our faith has radically misrepresented the best of it.  We are all part of a faith family and when your racist, war-mongering uncle does something hateful to your neighborhood, whether we like it or not, he represents the rest of the family to those around us.  In the same way, the worst of Christianity and Islam has often been given the most attention and created the most divide.  We have to acknowledge our inherent complicity and seek forgiveness.  I don’t know how many times my Muslim friends have apologized for the terrorist acts of their religions’ extremists.  My friends are embarrassed and assure me that the extremists don’t represent Islam or the majority of it followers.  In the same way, I have to acknowledge the ways my faith family has demonized, fueled hatred and violently imposed itself on those in our global village.  It is in the posture of forgiveness that we become equals and can begin to move forward in friendship.  
 
We Dance
 
I recently invited some of my friends from America (with The Global Immersion Project) to meet some of my friends in the Middle East who run a non-profit in the West Bank that promotes peace and reconciliation among the youth of Palestine.  Their staff is made up of both Christians and Muslims and they not only work together hand in hand under a common vision, they are like brothers and sisters.  This video gives a small picture of what unfolded in the exact place where hatred, fear and violence are “supposed” to rule.  Rather, peace, common joy and new relationships stole the day.  Such is life when we move forward as people who celebrate a common humanity.  
 
What happens when you get Christians and Muslims in the same room around a common vision of reconciliation?  Well, we dance…
 

Forming Leaders For Neighborhood Life in the Global Village

The Global Immersion Project from The Global Immersion Project on Vimeo.

TGIP_logoThose of you that have been following my life and work through this platform have heard of an initiative I co-founded a couple years ago with my friend Jer Swigart called The Global Immersion Project.  After lots of refining, on the ground experience and clear leading of the Spirit, this little idea/dream has birthed forth into something transformative and lasting.  We have been blown away by the response not only from individuals, but from organizations like World Vision, Fuller Seminary and many others.  More than anything, we are thrilled by the individual response and transformation from both the local peacemakers we have come alongside in Israel/Palestine and the American leaders who have participated in our formal 3-month Learning Lab that cultivates in a 2-week immersion experience into conflict in Israel/Palestine.  
 
Fusing my passion and calling to be a voice for international reconciliation and my everyday practice of forming missional leaders, TGIP’s mission is to cultivate everyday peacemakers through immersion in global conflict. Not only did Jesus call all his people to the vocation of peacemaking (Matt 5:9), he was deeply grieved when his people failed to live out these very tangible, practical ways that make for peace (Luke19:41,42).  In short, we hope to resource an entire generation of leaders with the practices that make for peace.  Not only will we be a presence of reconciliation globally, we will resource leaders to live, love and lead as everyday peacemakers in the way of Jesus back in their neighborhoods.  
 
This week, we formally “unveil” this important work and would greatly appreciate your support by both joining our social media outlets AND by helping us share our work through your personal networks.  
 
1. Check out and share our promo video embedded in this post.  
2. Learn more about TGIP by visiting our re-launched & newly branded website
3. Follow us on Twitter at @globalimmerse
4. “Like” our Facebook Page
5. Join our mailing list for exclusive updates and content.  
 
In Jesus, as the ultimate peacemaker, we acknowledge that there is nothing glamorous about the work of peacemaking.  It is gritty, subversive and requires everyday actions.  Friends, this work can no longer be outsourced to politicians or blind idealism.  As followers of Jesus, we must faithfully live into our vocation as agents of reconciliation fueled by the hope of New Creation.  
 
May we be a people who no longer run from conflict, but follow Jesus right to its center with the practices that make for peace.

Today (Like Everyday), We Pray For Our Enemies

It is in times and tragedies like those that happened in Boston that our call to pray for our enemies is most difficult.  May we be faithful to pray for them despite our circumstances.

Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy on me, a sinner. Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy, on all of us, sinners.

Father, we don’t know who was behind the tragedies in Boston, but we do know that they were human.  And we know we are to pray for our enemies.

In Jesus we see humanities true identity as ones who are to be agents of life, not death. Jesus, as first of New Creation, invites all humanity to reflect and participate in New Creation. 

Despite humanities sacred identity, evil often reveals itself through humanity. We must return to what we were created to be. May those behind this event return to who they were created to be. 

We pray specifically that those involved in this violence return to their shared humanity as they confront the violence brought on fellow humans as a result of their actions.  We pray that we don’t lose ours in the midst of it all.

May we embrace our vocation as peacemakers who are to be agents of restoration and reconciliation rather than divisiveness, enmity and violence. 

We pray for a collective grieving that fuels our ability to live with compassion, generosity and wholeness.

We plead for your justice to reign as we announce and promote your Kingdom reign through our words and deeds.

In the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, amen. 

 

Welcoming Rosie with a Community Blessing

When a new child is born into our community, we have a tradition of taking time to pray blessings over the new life as a way to acknowledge their sacred role not only in the life of our family, but in the life of the community we have entrusted ourselves to.  This is not a new tradition we came up with, but one that stretches back to early parts of our faith tradition.  It is a time to acknowledge that as members of the family of God, Janny and I don’t raise little Rosie on our own, but alongside a community of people who are commited to follow Jesus together.  Having been part of a community like this for a few years, we have found it to be one of the most important gifts we can give to our children.  

Yesterday, among neighbors, family and community mates, we were able to have a time of blessing over our newest little gal, Rosie.  With tears filling most of our eyes, prayers of blessing over Rosie were showered out from all corners of the room.  It was indeed, a thin place; a place where heaven and earth are only thinly separated.  Here is the blessing Janny and I prayed over our newest addition:

Today we celebrate Jesus being resurrected as the 1st of new creation. Gods dream for humanity begin to unfold in the gift of new life.

Rosie, you bring new life not only to your parents and sister, but to this whole community. You are a reflection and reminder of the innocence, purity and reliance humanity is to have on Jesus. 

We bless you with not only with family, but with community. We commit to daily offer you the gift of a community of people that are committed to following Jesus together. 

We bless your eyes that you may always look not through the lens of ethnicity, nationality or title, but through the lens of a shared humanity who shares the image of God. When others aren’t viewed in this way, we bless you with the courage to stand up for those experiencing oppression and reassign them their dignity. 

We bless you with the courage to teach us as we commit to be your students. We except and anticipate the ways you will teach us how to better live, love and lead in a way that honors God and neighbor. 

Lastly, we bless you with a committment to stand with you, cry with you and celebrate with you (even through the terrifying years of adolescence). 

It is with much joy and sacredness that we anticipate your future, little Rosie Lillian Huckins.

Amen