Vatican/WCC study on Conversion
Note: From the Watchman. This is a press release from the WCC. I put this
here to help you understand the United Faith Dialogues initiatives which are
ongoing.
Read my article Prophecy in
Action: Towards a United Faith
World Council of Churches
For immediate release: 17 May 2006
Vatican/WCC study on conversion affirms freedom of religion, warns about
“obsession of converting others”
A study process jointly sponsored by the Vatican and the World Council of
Churches (WCC) kicked off this week by affirming the freedom of religion as a
“non-negotiable” human right valid for everyone everywhere while at the same
time stressing that the “obsession of converting others” needs to be cured.
“Freedom of religion is a fundamental, inviolable and non-negotiable right of
every human being in every country in the world,” states the report of the 12-16
May meeting in Lariano/Velletri, near Rome, that launched the cooperative
study.
“Freedom of religion connotes the freedom, without any obstruction, to
practise one’s own faith, freedom to propagate the teachings of one’s faith to
people of one’s own and other faiths, and also the freedom to embrace another
faith out of one’s own free choice,” the report goes on.
But this right entails the “equally non-negotiable responsibility to respect
faiths other than our own, and never to denigrate, vilify or misrepresent them
for the purpose of affirming superiority of our faith”. Moreover, the “right to
invite others to an understanding” of one’s own faith “should not be exercised
by violating other’s rights and religious sensibilities”.
The report makes a bold recommendation: “All should heal themselves from the
obsession of converting others”. Acknowledging that “errors have been
perpetrated and injustice committed by the adherents of every faith,” it
suggests that “it is incumbent on every community to conduct honest
self-critical examination” of its historical record as well as its
doctrines.
As a result of such “self-criticism and repentance,” some reforms should take
place in order to ensure a healthier approach to the issue of conversion. Some
concrete suggestions include: discouraging and rejecting “unethical means”,
avoiding taking advantage of “vulnerable” people like children and disabled
persons, and doing humanitarian work “without any ulterior motives”.
The report, issued by the 27 participants from Buddhist, Christian, Hindu,
Muslim, Jewish and Yoruba religious backgrounds, recognizes that “many
differences and disagreements” remained among them, but nonetheless a
“convergent understanding of the several aspects of the issue of religious
conversion” developed.
The participants welcomed as useful and needed the idea of a collectively
developed ‘code of conduct’ on conversion and suggested “that inter-religious
dialogues on the issue of conversion should continue at various
levels”.
Original article: Wings Watchman
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