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14 June 2017

June 2017 meeting for reverence - what is our role in the face of violence #unitarians

This meeting was held in the days after the deathly attacks in Manchester and London that killed many, and injured and traumatised many more, by people claiming a link between their actions and the faith of Islam.

During our gathering we sang, we carried out our usual ritual, we held our period of silent contemplation, and lit candles marking our joys and concerns.  But overarching all this, the theme was “Death as Teacher – holding to our truth in time of division and falsity”. 

We humans struggle to handle death.  Somehow, at a very deep level, we long that there be no more death.  Despite knowing that to be impossible.

And we do not know how – or what practical actions can be taken – to combat the ideology causing this 21st century violence.  One thing is sure: ignorance and stereotyping will not help.  Perhaps our role, meeting under the Unitarian umbrella, is to do some exploring and learning as a counter to ignorance and stereotyping.  Even if we don’t find any answers.

Building on last month’s gathering, in which the scripture reading came from Sikhism, our two readings today were from Hinduism and a contemporary study of Islam by a Westerner.

We heard last month that Sikhism rejects the idea that strict rules on conduct are needed to bring the soul to salvation, insisting instead that a clear and intentional focus on God throughout all daily activity is all that is required.

The first reading we had today might have been one of the rulings that Sikhism had rejected.  It was a section of the Katha Upanishad that can be boiled down to just these words:

“Perennial joy or passing pleasure?
This is the choice one is to make always.
...  The wise welcome what leads
To abiding joy, though painful at the time.
The ignorant run, goaded by their senses,
After what seems immediate pleasure.”

We considered that such a passage from Hinduism can be interpreted as meaning “forego pleasure in this life for the sake of a better life after death”.  We compared this with the Medieval western Christian view which was (among other things) a means of keeping order in society, and which was backed up by dreadful physical punishments on anyone who broke the rules.  We also noted that it is exactly this kind of perspective that seems to drive today’s angry young men and women who claim for themselves a disputed alignment with Islam.  Careless of their own lives and others’, they commit heinous crimes of violence in the hope of rewards associated with martyrdom – or so we are told.

But a more careful look at this Hindu scripture reveals something else.  It comes from a tradition that suggests that death occurs only to that part of ourselves which was born; born and launched into separate existence.   And more precisely, the Katha Upanishad portrays a hero who takes the demands of religion very seriously indeed – demands such as
  • obedience to an ideal even in the face of hypocrisy,
  • an emphasis on reconciliation,
  • the need for spiritual practice,
  • and the recognition of the transcendent.
 And this hero is wise enough to comprehend in conversation with Lord Death that
  • it is really only Self, Oneness, pure consciousness, that is the enjoyer – of itself.
  • so that when one realizes the Self there is nothing else to be known and all the knots that strangle the heart are loosened.
Such knowings are more sophisticated and do not seem to be true to a harsh, simplistic view that there is a life after death that is better than this and which is worth killing for

The second reading was an interpretation of the writing of an Islamic philosopher, Ibn al-Arabi (1165-1240), by Karen Armstrong.  Ibn al-Arabi  provides a gentle, complex view of the relationship between humans and God.  He saw God, the Unknown God, as sighing with longing to be known, with each of his sighs bringing forth another, unique human being, in the form of logoi, words that express God to himself.  Then the Revealed God in each human being longs to returns to its source in the Unknown God, and we humans experience this as a longing for something to fulfil our deepest desires and explain the tragedy and pain of life.  As Karen says, “Divinity and humanity were thus two aspects of the divine life that animates the entire cosmos.”

This is another sophisticated, rather gentle model for how it all works.  Philosophers like Ibn al-Arabi seem unlikely to boil life down to a simple formula that would incite violence for the sake of a different life hereafter.

In these musings we learned that it is not only the scriptures of Islam that can be used as an excuse for violence.  Moreover, that Islamic philosophers from long ago have been developing complex and gentle ideas that do not seem to have been encompassed by terrorists.

We concluded with this thought: this group meets in the name of the Unitarian community, and we say that people are to find what meaning they can in their lives.  So when people struggle in the face of today’s pain and tragedy, what are we to say to them?  It was suggested that, in the words of our last  hymn, if we feel able, we can say this:

We all must say to them
What we all know for sure
That there’s a goodness in the world
Which ever shall endure

We may not give up hope;
We will not give up love.
Our lives are grounded in the faith that
In one God we all move.
(words by Peter Sampson)