An interfaith group founded by Unification Church leader Sun
Myung Moon is spearheading an effort to have Christian
ministers remove crosses from their churches, calling them a symbol of
oppression and perceived superiority. Mainstream Christian leaders call the
request "outrageously bigoted."
The American Clergy Leadership Conference (ACLC), an organization that began as
a project of Moon's Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU),
believes the key to "true and lasting peace in the Middle East" is
reconciliation between members of the world's three largest religions.
"Jews, Christians and Muslims must come together to heal divisions of the
past, to stand together in a moment of repentance and reconciliation, and thus,
tear down the walls that separate us as people of faith," said Archbishop
George Augustus Stallings, Jr., of the independent Imani
Temple African American Catholic congregation in Washington, D.C.
The ACLC held a symposium in New York Thursday on Jewish-Christian-Muslim
reconciliation and Middle East peace entitled "Harmony Amongst the
Children of Abraham." Stallings, who serves as national chairman of the
executive committee of the ACLC, told CNSNews.com by telephone that part of
that reconciliation involves assessing how Christian traditions are perceived
by people of other faiths.
"We have realized that, as expressions of faith, there are certain symbols
that have stood in the way," Stallings said. "The cross has served as
a barrier in bringing about a true spirit of reconciliation between Jews and
also between Muslims and Christians, and thus, we have sought to remove the
cross from our Christian churches across America as a sign of our willingness
to remove any barrier that stands in the way of us coming together as people of
faith."
Michael Schwartz of Concerned Women for America - a biblically based, public
policy women's organization - was shocked at Stallings' assessment.
"If a Christian objected to a Star of David or a Crescent, we would know
that person is a bigot. When a Jew or Muslim objects to the display of the
cross by Christians, we know the same thing about that person," Schwartz
said. "To tear down our religious symbols, to uproot our traditions is not
the way to reconciliation, but rather, to recognize with respect, our own and
the traditions of others is the way to true reconciliation.
"Just imagine if some misguided Christian were to suggest that the Jews
have to take away their symbol and the Muslims would have to take away their
symbol, not display it in public any longer," Schwartz continued.
"That would be identified instantly as a statement of intolerance.
Reconciliation and peace do not grow out of intolerance."
Cross is symbol of 'religious intolerance, forced conversions...racism'
Stallings acknowledges that the cross is central to teaching people about the
saving grace offered through Christ's death and resurrection but, he argued,
Christians have also used the cross to send other messages.
"We have held up this cross in the face of Jews to say, 'If it had not
been for your rejection of Jesus, our Messiah would never have been
crucified," Stallings added. "We also know that the cross has stood
as a barrier in Christian-Muslim relationships because we have held up our
cross as a superior faith, that we - as Christians - are superior over the
Muslims."
Stallings added that "a history of religious intolerance, forced
conversions, inquisitions and even racism as used by white supremacists"
also follows the cross through Christian history.
"The cross does not, by any means, symbolize a 'history of religious
intolerance, forced conversions, inquisitions or racism,'" Schwartz
responded tersely. "That is an outrageously bigoted statement."
Rev. Phillip Schanker, vice president of the FFWPU,
said getting Christian pastors to remove the cross from their churches involves
more than just taking down a symbol.
"There are divergent theological understandings centered around the cross," Schanker
said. "So, it's not just the symbol we're dealing with."
While Christians may view the cross as the symbol of Christ's sacrificial death
to pay for their sins, Schanker agreed with Stallings
that Jews and Muslims have different perceptions. Jewish tradition does not
recognize Christ as the savior, and Islamic teachings deny that it was Jesus
who was crucified.
Christians, Schanker said, need to consider those
disparate beliefs and ask themselves if the symbolism of the cross is worth
maintaining the divisions it allegedly creates.
"It's a matter of overcoming the religious arrogance, the religious
chauvinism, the narrow-mindedness, the judgmentalism
that often comes from insecurity," Schanker
said.
Schwartz agreed that a judgmental attitude is a problem, but he said it appears
those opposed to the display of the cross are the ones suffering from it.
"To paraphrase the man who died on the cross for our sins and the sins of
Mr. Schanker and all those Muslims and Jews,"
Schwartz said, "they ought to take care of the beam in their own eye
before they look at the speck in their brother's eye."
Schanker accused those who disagree with the
anti-cross movement of overreacting.
"I'm sure, for some narrow-minded Christians, it seems like we're
undermining or denying the very foundations of Christian belief. Not at all;
nobody is questioning the salvific role or Jesus'
sacrificial position," Schanker said. "But
we're recognizing from within New Testament understanding that Jesus
transcended the cross. Let's not continue crucifying him. That's not where he
is."
Schwartz laughed in response to Schanker's statement.
"Getting these lectures on Christology from somebody who's announced
himself as an enemy of the cross is really amusing," Schwartz said,
recalling a comment made by a little girl in Alexander Solzhenitsyn's Gulag
Archipelago in reference to prayer in Stalin's Soviet Union.
"Everyone is allowed to pray, as long as no one hears but God,"
Schwartz quoted. "This is the degree of religious liberty that Mr. Schanker will allow to the one religion that he apparently
thinks ought never to speak its name or show its face."
Schwartz found it telling that a group founded by the leader of the
"Moonies" would call together Muslims and Jews to renounce "the
universal symbol of Christianity as something hateful.
"In the interest of peace, the three who believe that Jesus Christ was not
God want to stifle the one who believes that Jesus Christ was God,"
Schwartz observed. "Is that peace through conquest, peace through
surrender, peace through requiring that Christians cease proclaiming their
Christianity? That is not an offer of peace."