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Five Catholic experts in world religions:
From Belgium, Jesuit Fr. Jacques Dupuis spent 36 years in India before
joining the theology faculty at Romes Gregorian University. He served for
many years as an adviser on interreligious issues to Vatican offices. He is
currently under investigation by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
for his book Towards a Christian Theology of Religious Pluralism (Orbis
Books, 1997). In it, Dupuis argues that Gods "Eternal Word" existed
prior to incarnation in Jesus and was active in other cultures, inspiring the
saving insights each achieves, while Jesus remains the unique
"sacrament" of God. Dupuis suggests that Christian missionary efforts
should have broader aims than , making converts. The goal, he argues, should be
building up the reign of God. A cautious interpreter of church documents, Dupuis
believes that Christs role in salvation is "constitutive" that is,
all salvation comes through Christ in some sense. Some theologians of religious
pluralism have criticized Dupuis for this, as well as for his assertion that
other religions will be "fulfilled" in Christianity at the end of
time.
Michael Amaladoss
Indian Jesuit Fr. Michael Amaladoss believes the most pressing religious
challenge today is defending the oppressed. He supports development of counter
cultural communities as alternatives to values and assumptions of global
capitalism. "Such counter cultural communities may not always carry the
label Christian," Amaladoss has written. "In the past our
mission has often targeted the followers of other religions. The supposition
then was that ours was the only true religion. Our evaluation of other religions
and at least of some of their followers is more positive today. Besides, faced
with the threat of global disaster brought about by radical modernity, we see in
all those committed to an alternate world allies rather than enemies." This
tendency to see collaboration on behalf of justice as more important than
religious affiliation has alarmed Vatican officials. Amaladoss is the author of
Making All Things New: Dialogue, Pluralism, and Evangelization in Asia (Orbis,
1990).
Raimundo Panikkar
Born in Spain to a Catholic mother and Hindu father, Fr.
Raimundo Panikkar has long specialized in the dialogue between Christianity
and Asian religions. Of his first trip from Europe to India, Panikkar once
wrote: "I left as a Christian, I found myself a Hindu, and I return as
a Buddhist, without ever having ceased to be a Christian." His best
known books include The Cosmotheandric Experience (Orbis, 1993) and The
Infra-religious Dialogue (Paulist, 1978). Panikkar believes that while
Christians must remain devoted to Christ, it is not necessary to believe
that all truth is exhausted by Christ, much less by the historical person
Jesus of Nazareth. He has argued that although Jesus is referred to as the
Son of God in the New Testament, this does not mean the "Son of
God" is always and only Jesus.
Paul Knitter
Aloysius Pieris