|
THE
WISDOM FUND
http://www.twf.org
Muhammad Asad, born Leopold Weiss in Poland in 1900, in his interpretation of
the Quran wrote: "When his contemporaries heard the words islam and muslim, they
understood them as denoting man's 'self-surrender to God' and 'one who
surrenders himself to God,' without limiting himself to any specific community
or denominatione.g., in 3:67, where Abraham is spoken of as having 'surrendered
himself unto God' (kana musliman), or in 3:52 where the disciples of Jesus say,
'Bear thou witness that we have surrendered ourselves unto God (bianna musliman).'
In Arabic, this original meaning has remained unimpaired, and no Arab scholar
has ever become oblivious of the wide connotation of these terms."
---
June 17, 2007
Seattle Times
'I am both Muslim and Christian'
Redding, who until recently was director of faith formation at St. Mark's
Episcopal Cathedral, has been a priest for more than 20 years. Now she's ready
to tell people that, for the last 15 months, she's also been a Muslim -- drawn
to the faith after an introduction to Islamic prayers left her profoundly moved.
By Janet I. Tu
Shortly after noon on Fridays, the Rev. Ann Holmes Redding ties on a black
headscarf, preparing to pray with her Muslim group on First Hill.
On Sunday mornings, Redding puts on the white collar of an Episcopal priest.
She does both, she says, because she's Christian and Muslim.
Redding, who until recently was director of faith formation at St. Mark's
Episcopal Cathedral, has been a priest for more than 20 years. Now she's ready
to tell people that, for the last 15 months, she's also been a Muslim drawn to
the faith after an introduction to Islamic prayers left her profoundly moved.
Her announcement has provoked surprise and bewilderment in many, raising an
obvious question: How can someone be both a Christian and a Muslim?
But it has drawn other reactions too. Friends generally say they support her,
while religious scholars are mixed: Some say that, depending on how one
interprets the tenets of the two faiths, it is, indeed, possible to be both.
Others consider the two faiths mutually exclusive.
"There are tenets of the faiths that are very, very different," said Kurt
Fredrickson, director of the doctor of ministry program at Fuller Theological
Seminary in Pasadena, Calif. "The most basic would be: What do you do with
Jesus?"
Christianity has historically regarded Jesus as the son of God and God
incarnate, both fully human and fully divine. Muslims, though they regard Jesus
as a great prophet, do not see him as divine and do not consider him the son of
God.
"I don't think it's possible" to be both, Fredrickson said, just like "you can't
be a Republican and a Democrat."
Redding, who will begin teaching the New Testament as a visiting assistant
professor at Seattle University this fall, has a different analogy: "I am both
Muslim and Christian, just like I'm both an American of African descent and a
woman. I'm 100 percent both."
Redding doesn't feel she has to resolve all the contradictions. People within
one religion can't even agree on all the details, she said. "So why would I
spend time to try to reconcile all of Christian belief with all of Islam?
"At the most basic level, I understand the two religions to be compatible.
That's all I need."
She says she felt an inexplicable call to become Muslim, and to surrender to God
the meaning of the word "Islam."
"It wasn't about intellect," she said. "All I know is the calling of my heart to
Islam was very much something about my identity and who I am supposed to be.
"I could not not be a Muslim."
Redding's situation is highly unusual. Officials at the national Episcopal
Church headquarters said they are not aware of any other instance in which a
priest has also been a believer in another faith. They said it's up to the local
bishop to decide whether such a priest could continue in that role.
Redding's bishop, the Rt. Rev. Vincent Warner, says he accepts Redding as an
Episcopal priest and a Muslim, and that he finds the interfaith possibilities
exciting. Her announcement, first made through a story in her diocese's
newspaper, hasn't caused much controversy yet, he said.
Some local Muslim leaders are perplexed.
Being both Muslim and Christian "I don't know how that works," said Hisham
Farajallah, president of the Islamic Center of Washington.
But Redding has been embraced by leaders at the Al-Islam Center of Seattle, the
Muslim group she prays with.
"Islam doesn't say if you're a Christian, you're not a Muslim," said programming
director Ayesha Anderson. "Islam doesn't lay it out like that."
Redding believes telling her story can help ease religious tensions, and she
hopes it can be a step toward her dream of creating an institute to study
Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
"I think this thing that's happened to me can be a sign of hope," she said.
Finding a religion that fit
Redding is 55 and single, with deep brown eyes, dreadlocks and a voice that
becomes easily impassioned when talking about faith. She's also a classically
trained singer, and has sung at jazz nights at St. Mark's.
The oldest of three girls, Redding grew up in Pennsylvania in a high-achieving,
intellectual family. Her father was one of the lawyers who argued the landmark
Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case that desegregated the nation's
public schools. Her mother was in the first class of Fulbright scholars.
Though her parents weren't particularly religious, they had her baptized and
sent her to an Episcopal Sunday school. She has always sensed that God existed
and God loved her, even when things got bleak which they did.
She experienced racism in schools, was sexually abused and, by the time she was
a young adult, was struggling with alcohol addiction; she's been in recovery for
20 years.
Despite those difficulties, she graduated from Brown University, earned master's
degrees from two seminaries and received her Ph.D. in New Testament from Union
Theological Seminary in New York City. She felt called to the priesthood and was
ordained in 1984.
As much as she loves her church, she has always challenged it. She calls
Christianity the "world religion of privilege." She has never believed in
original sin. And for years she struggled with the nature of Jesus' divinity.
She found a good fit at St. Mark's, coming to the flagship of the Episcopal
Church in Western Washington in 2001. She was in charge of programs to form and
deepen people's faith until March this year when she was one of three employees
laid off for budget reasons. The dean of the cathedral said Redding's
exploration of Islam had nothing to do with her layoff.
Ironically, it was at St. Mark's that she first became drawn to Islam.
In fall 2005, a local Muslim leader gave a talk at the cathedral, then prayed
before those attending. Redding was moved. As he dropped to his knees and
stretched forward against the floor, it seemed to her that his whole body was
involved in surrendering to God.
Then in the spring, at a St. Mark's interfaith class, another Muslim leader
taught a chanted prayer and led a meditation on opening one's heart. The
chanting appealed to the singer in Redding; the meditation spoke to her heart.
She began saying the prayer daily.
Around that time, her mother died, and then "I was in a situation that I could
not handle by any other means, other than a total surrender to God," she said.
She still doesn't know why that meant she had to become a Muslim. All she knows
is "when God gives you an invitation, you don't turn it down."
In March 2006, she said her shahada the profession of faith testifying that
there is only one God and that Mohammed is his messenger. She became a Muslim.
Before she took the shahada, she read a lot about Islam. Afterward, she learned
from local Muslim leaders, including those in Islam's largest denomination Sunni
and those in the Sufi mystical tradition of Islam. She began praying with the
Al-Islam Center, a Sunni group that is predominantly African-American.
There were moments when practicing Islam seemed like coming home.
In Seattle's Episcopal circles, Redding had mixed largely with white people. "To
walk into Al-Islam and be reminded that there are more people of color in the
world than white people, that in itself is a relief," she said.
She found the discipline of praying five times a day one of the five pillars of
Islam that all Muslims are supposed to follow gave her the deep sense of
connection with God that she yearned for.
It came from "knowing at all times I'm in between prayers." She likens it to
being in love, constantly looking forward to having "all these dates with God.
... Living a life where you're remembering God intentionally, consciously, just
changes everything."
Friends who didn't know she was practicing Islam told her she glowed.
Aside from the established sets of prayers she recites in Arabic fives times
each day, Redding says her prayers are neither uniquely Islamic nor Christian.
They're simply her private talks with God or Allah she uses both names
interchangeably. "It's the same person, praying to the same God."
In many ways, she says, "coming to Islam was like coming into a family with whom
I'd been estranged. We have not only the same God, but the same ancestor with
Abraham."
A shared beginning
Indeed, Islam, Christianity and Judaism trace their roots to Abraham, the
patriarch of Judaism who is also considered the spiritual father of all three
faiths. They share a common belief in one God, and there are certain similar
stories in their holy texts.
But there are many significant differences, too.
Muslims regard the Quran as the unadulterated word of God, delivered through the
angel Gabriel to Mohammed. While they believe the Torah and the Gospels include
revelations from God, they believe those revelations have been misinterpreted or
mishandled by humans.
Most significantly, Muslims and Christians disagree over the divinity of Jesus.
Muslims generally believe in Jesus' virgin birth, that he was a messenger of
God, that he ascended to heaven alive and that he will come back at the end of
time to destroy evil. They do not believe in the Trinity, in the divinity of
Jesus or in his death and resurrection.
For Christians, belief in Jesus' divinity, and that he died on the cross and was
resurrected, lie at the heart of the faith, as does the belief that there is one
God who consists of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Redding's views, even before she embraced Islam, were more interpretive than
literal.
She believes the Trinity is an idea about God and cannot be taken literally.
She does not believe Jesus and God are the same, but rather that God is more
than Jesus.
She believes Jesus is the son of God insofar as all humans are the children of
God, and that Jesus is divine, just as all humans are divine because God dwells
in all humans.
What makes Jesus unique, she believes, is that out of all humans, he most
embodied being filled with God and identifying completely with God's will.
She does believe that Jesus died on the cross and was resurrected, and
acknowledges those beliefs conflict with the teachings of the Quran. "That's
something I'll find a challenge the rest of my life," she said.
She considers Jesus her savior. At times of despair, because she knows Jesus
suffered and overcame suffering, "he has connected me with God," she said.
That's not to say she couldn't develop as deep a relationship with Mohammed.
"I'm still getting to know him," she said.
Matter of interpretation
Some religious scholars understand Redding's thinking.
While the popular Christian view is that Jesus is God and that he came to Earth
and took on a human body, other Christians believe his divinity means that he
embodied the spirit of God in his life and work, said Eugene Webb, professor
emeritus of comparative religion at the University of Washington.
Webb says it's possible to be both Muslim and Christian: "It's a matter of
interpretation. But a lot of people on both sides do not believe in
interpretation. "
Ihsan Bagby, associate professor of Islamic studies at the University of
Kentucky, agrees with Webb, and adds that Islam tends to be a little more
flexible. Muslims can have faith in Jesus, he said, as long as they believe in
Mohammed's message.
Other scholars are skeptical.
"The theological beliefs are irreconcilable," said Mahmoud Ayoub, professor of
Islamic studies and comparative religion at Temple University in Philadelphia.
Islam holds that God is one, unique, indivisible. "For Muslims to say Jesus is
God would be blasphemy."
Frank Spina, an Episcopal priest and also a professor of Old Testament and
biblical theology at Seattle Pacific University, puts it bluntly.
"I just do not think this sort of thing works," he said. "I think you have to
give up what is essential to Christianity to make the moves that she has done.
"The essence of Christianity was not that Jesus was a great rabbi or even a
great prophet, but that he is the very incarnation of the God that created the
world.... Christianity stands or falls on who Jesus is."
Spina also says that as priests, he and Redding have taken vows of commitment to
the doctrines of the church. "That means none of us get to work out what we
think all by ourselves."
Redding knows there are many Christians and Muslims who will not accept her as
both.
"I don't care," she says. "They can't take away my baptism." And as she
understands it, once she's made her profession of faith to become a Muslim, no
one can say she isn't that, either.
While she doesn't rule out that one day she may choose one or the other, it's
more likely "that I'm going to be 100 percent Christian and 100 percent Muslim
when I die."
Deepened spirituality
These days, Redding usually carries a headscarf with her wherever she goes so
she can pray five times a day.
On Fridays, she prays with about 20 others at the Al-Islam Center. On Sundays,
she prays in church, usually at St. Clement's of Rome in the Mount Baker
neighborhood.
One thing she prays for every day: "I pray not to cause scandal or bring shame
upon either of my traditions."
Being Muslim has given her insights into Christianity, she said. For instance,
because Islam regards Jesus as human, not divine, it reinforces for her that "we
can be like Jesus. There are no excuses."
Doug Thorpe, who served on St. Mark's faith-formation committee with Redding,
said he's trying to understand all the dimensions of her faith choices. But he
saw how it deepened her spirituality. And it spurred him to read the Quran and
think more deeply about his own faith.
He believes Redding is being called. She is, "by her very presence, a bridge
person," Thorpe said. "And we desperately need those bridge persons."
In Redding's car, she has hung up a cross she made of clear crystal beads. Next
to it, she has dangled a heart-shaped leather object etched with the Arabic
symbol for Allah.
"For me, that symbolizes who I am," Redding said. "I look through Jesus and I
see Allah."
Janet I. Tu: 206-464-2272 or jtu@seattletimes.com
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003751274_redding17m.html
|