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Katolsk vision är ett forum för fri debatt mellan katoliker, andra kristna och allmänheten i övrigt. Alla deltagare i debatten i detta forum svarar själva för sina åsikter.
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: tis mar 27, 2007 4:27 pm Rubrik: Global etik |
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I en intressant artikel av Deborah Gyapong
i Canadian Catholic News
kan man läsa följande uttalanden av Hans Küng:
" variations of the Golden Rule are found in all religions"
“If I am asked as a person ‘what is for you, the way, the truth and the life?’ then I answer
‘Jesus Christ’ and that remains for me my deep conviction of faith which I
kept in all these dialogues,” he said. I think there was never some
ambiguity in that.”
“If I ask my Jewish friend what is for you the way, the truth and the life,
he will tell me the Torah. The Muslim will tell me the Koran. I think we
need to take seriously at the same time, these two dimensions, the internal
dimension of every human being. I have to acknowledge that my Jewish friend
is honest.”
More: <http://www.catholic.org/printer_friendly.php?id=23448§ion=Cathcom>
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Elisabet
Datum: 17 december 2006 Poster: 78
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Postat: ons mar 28, 2007 8:39 am Rubrik: |
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Praying to the Buddha
Living amid Religious Pluralism
Peter C. Phan
http://www.commonwealmagazine.org/print_format.php?id_article=1828
"... Interreligious dialogue can be practiced by people of faith, irrespective of educational level, social standing, and religious status, and is urgently needed in the conflict-ridden political and religious climate of the post-9/11 United States. Such dialogue is not merely a preparatory step toward peacemaking and reconciliation; it constitutes the very process of peacemaking and reconciliation itself, a process that occurs precisely in the acts of living together, working together, and praying together. These dialogues are powerful means to correct biases, erase deep-seated hatreds, and heal ancient wounds. By promoting communication, grassroots activism toward peace and justice, and above all, shared experiences of the Divine or the Absolute in spite of religious differences, such dialogue helps forge a new way of life." ...
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About the writer
Peter C. Phan
Peter C. Phan, a Vietnamese American, holds the Ignacio Ellacuría Chair of Catholic Social Thought at Georgetown University. He has written or edited more than twenty books and three hundred essays. His latest work includes a trilogy: Christianity with an Asian Face, In Our Own Tongues, and Being Religious Interreligiously (Orbis Books). This essay has been funded by a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation.
http://www.commonwealmagazine.org/print_format.php?id_article=1828
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What do you think about religious pluralism?
Elisabet |
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