Erie reading - bench 2011

   "You're going to hell," my friend Greg Oswald told me when I was twelve. "Why?" I asked. "Because you're not a Catholic," he announced.

   Greg's view is still shared by millions. But, Pope Francis isn't one of them. That is why many believe that his selection is a transcendent blessing.

   "The Lord has redeemed all of us with the blood of Christ: all of us, not just Catholics," the new pope has declared. "Everyone!" 

   My backyard reading of this pope's views tells me that his understanding of Radical Loving Care runs deep. His particular message of tolerance is nothing short of revolutionary for a church that has long held that only Catholics enter heaven. Many other religions recruit members with the same strange promise – only our believers will be saved. 

   Suddenly, this pope says all are redeemed. 'Father, the atheists?' he was asked. "Even the atheists. Everyone!" he repeated firmly.

   With one statement, Pope Francis began to redeem his church from centuries of religious bigotry.

   If Christians are the only ones who enter paradise what about all the people in China who had never heard of Christianity? I wondered as a kid.  Didn't you wonder the same? 

   Why is religious exclusiveness a problem? Hundreds of hospitals carry religious names signaling a loving mission. But in the past, that did not stop some from practicing discrimination.

   Organized religion is a mixed blessing. It offers lovely communities of believers and a way to develop personal spirituatiality. But too many wars and too much persecution have offset many of the gifts that religion offers.

   With a pope like Frances there would have been no need for Martin Luther to launch the Protestant Reformation. Back then, the Catholic Church made followers pay indulgences to get into heaven. (The "Protestant" name arose because Luther was protesting 16th Century Catholic practices.)

   This pope would never have allowed the tortures of non-Catholics in the Middle Ages. Yet today, in many parts of the world, Muslims discriminate against Christians, Christians discriminate against Hindus and Buddhists in Southeast Asia are being imprisoned for their beliefs.  

   In later life Luther himself demonstrated hypocrasy by turning anti-Semitic. And Lutherans and Catholics did little to stop the rise of Nazism in the 1930s.

   This past Saturday, November 9, marked the 75th anniversary of "Kristallnacht," the night when Nazi gangs burned Jewish establishments in Berlin and sent more than 30,000 Jews to concentration camps. Where were the so-called Christians as six million more were tortured and murdered in those camps?

   Our beliefs may be fine for us but do we have the right to force them on others, to make the arrogant assumption that every other path is wrong? Doesn't this feed Love's nemeses – discrimination? 

   Radical Loving Care teaches tolerance. Caregivers love patients because every human, "even the atheists," carries the spark of the divine.

-Reverend Erie Chapman

Note: November 11 is Veterans Day in America. May we honor all of our veterans all year long.

5 responses to “Days 314-318 – Love for all – Why Pope Francis is a Hero”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    A flurry of thoughts and responses are flooding my mind as I read your essay, Erie. There is so much one could delve into but what I really want to focus on the core of your precept. Honestly, the idea that there is only one way has been a lifelong challenge for me to accept and I find this to be a source of resistance. Unfortunately, I think that too many people take the written account of Jesus’ words quite literal rather than discovering their deeper spiritual meaning. Also, we can interpret scripture based on own world view and there are so many varied ways of seeing
    The radical and revolutionary way in which Jesus lived, loved and accepted others is a real truth worth embracing. Perhaps his declaration that the only way to the Father is “through me” was really more about living Love; not fear.
    My favorite verse in the bible is from Corinthian 12
    “The eye cannot say to the hand, “I don’t need you!” And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!” 22 On the contrary, those parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable,23 and the parts that we think are less honorable we treat with special honor. And the parts that are unpresentable are treated with special modesty, 24 while our presentable parts need no special treatment. But God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, 25 so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other. 26 If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.”
    BTW, I agree wholeheartedly; Pope Francis is infusing new life, leadership, compassion and love into the Catholic religion. He is a humble yet unifying force and he is helping to bring about much needed change and spiritual transformation, Glory be!
    We cannot reach Love’s source and unity alone, we must first reach out to take the hand of our brother and sister.

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  2. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    It’s ego. And sometimes we just get stuck in fear. It helps to always be mindful that we are all children of God – every one of us. In God’s eyes, we could not be one bit better – any one and all of us. If we could just know and remember that, we would be better at living love.
    Pope Francis – I love that guy!

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  3. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    Erie: “Suddenly the Pope says all are redeemed”. This was my soul searching question since my teenage years. Is my father who has been deceased for many years-is he in heaven or is he in hell?. Reason tells me I don’t think he is in hell. My father who was originally from China relocated in the far east where I was born. While a teenager in school I asked him what to fill the paperwork for school regarding my religion. I was studying in a Catholic school and asked him can I write down “Christian”. “No” he said, “Christianity is a white man’s religion”. “Write down Buddhist” so obediently I did. Recently I came across a book “God is Love” collected writings of Bishop K.H. Ting he writes very clearly that creation and redemption are one. Here are some excerpts from his writing on this subject. “Setting creation and redemption in opposition to one another and separating the Lord of Creation from the Lord of Redemption, emphasizes redemption at the expense of creation. God the Father and God the Son are split and each tends to to its own. This view, which tears apart the Trinity, appeared early in the in the history of the Church. Some heresies go to the extreme of making the Lord of Creation and the Lord of Redemption into two opposing gods. Christ is the Lord of both creation and redemption, as Colossians 1:15-20 says quite clearly.” The Christians in China numbered less than a million people in 1950 but the Church has grown to more than 17 million in the registered churches today.

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  4. Fr. Jim Avatar
    Fr. Jim

    The idea that the entire earth will be redeemed is as old as the Biblical writers. The Book of Revelations speaks of a new heaven and a new earth. Saint Paul says that, in the end, God will be all in all (1 Corinthians 15). Origen was the great theologian of the third century, who believed that salvation is universal. The list goes on. It is a non-dualistic way of faith – so that it is a vision of healing and redemption, and not a division into the saved and the unsaved. It is the vision of Jesus, when he said, “If I am lifted up, I will draw all things unto myself (John 12). Thank you, Erie for the beautiful meditation on this day. This is a vision of peace – a path of reality that clarifies the world of impermanence and suffering. Through the struggle of everyday life, we see the light of hope in all its beauty, and it draws us on.
    Fr. Jim

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  5. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    Thank you Fr. Jim for your encouraging words. “Salvation is universal and it is a vision of healing and redemption.” This makes it very clear as I often wondered what happened to those people whom I have preached the gospel and they would not accept the Lord – are they saved or not? Thank you for putting my mind at ease.

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