Praise for Acting on Faith
I LOVE this book. It has wisdom from different traditions, friendship across faiths, learning through engaging diversity, stories of vision turned into concrete action, and so much more. It brought me back to the core idea behind Interfaith Youth Coreall traditions call on us to serve others, and there is no greater joy or more important task than to do so together. Thank you to everyone involved in this project for this gift to the world.
Eboo Patel, Founder and President, Interfaith Youth Core
This poignant look into the heart of our various religious traditions is a celebration of the power of The Holy moving in us and through us in many voices and spiritual traditions. Telling stories, human stories, helps lead us into faith-filled celebration of our differences as grace marks and reminds us to do the work of everyday justice.
Emilie M. Townes, Dean and E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Professor of Womanist Ethics and Society, Vanderbilt University Divinity School
Read this book and feel God tapping you on the shoulder every few pages, as I did. Youthful voices finding wisdom in their friendships, pain, and questions, alongside experienced faith leaders surprised by the joy of discovering justice in new corners as they wrestle their faith to the ground.
Rob Wilson-Black, CEO, Sojourners
Acting on Faith: Stories of Courage, Activism, and Hope across Religions shares powerful and inspiring stories of real people, doing important community work, from diverse backgrounds and experiences. Faires Beadle and Haskins illustrate the commonality of our values and struggles in the midst of our diversity. A must read for those doing interfaith work.
Kim Bobo, Executive Director, Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy
Most people, no matter how many newspapers they read or diverse Twitter feeds they follow, hear only a tiny percentage of the stories this world and its people have to tell. We mostly hear stories from others like us, whose lives and neighborhoods and daily struggles look a good deal like our own. Such is the particularity of human life, which seems only exacerbated by recent political and cultural polarization. Acting on Faith: Stories of Courage, Activism, and Hope across Religions grants readers access to life changing stories offered in truly diverse voices. Though the responses to the most pressing challenges and questions of our age are unsurprisingly varied across religious traditions, the good will, self-reflection, and commitment to interfaith justice work articulated by each contributor promises a futureand presentin which that polarization can be transformed. Faires Beadle and Haskins have assembled a hope-filled and very necessary resource.
Bromleigh McCleneghan, Associate Pastor, Union Church of Hinsdale, author of Good Christian Sex: Why Chastity Isnt the Only Option and Other Things the Bible Says About Sex, coauthor of Hopes and Fears: Everyday Theology for New Parents and Other Tired, Anxious People, coeditor of When Kids Ask Hard Questions: Faith-Filled Responses for Tough Topics
Copyright
Copyright 2020 by Diane Faires Beadle, Jamie Lynn Haskins, and the essay authors.
All rights reserved. For permission to reuse content, please contact Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, www.copyright.com .
Quotations from the Bible, unless otherwise marked, are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Quotations from the Quran indicate the English translation they are from. The translations can be found at https://www.islamawakened.com/index.php .
Hadith quotations are from https://www.islamicfinder.org/hadith.
Quotations from the Torah marked Sefaria are from https://www.sefaria.org .
Cover design: Jennifer Pavlovitz
ChalicePress.com
Print 9780827200890
EPUB 9780827200906
EPDF 9780827200913
Contents
Introduction
Dianes inspiration for this project:
It was a rainy, dreary day on the Habitat for Humanity construction site, but warm laughter and a sense of joy was palpable in spite of the weather. A few of the volunteers, like the friendly women from the Hindu temple, barely knew how to hold a hammer. Others, like the two Buddhist monks in orange robes, could have built the whole house by themselves. A Sikh man used duct tape to keep his hard hat securely fastened over his turban, and the young Imam decided to take off his long, black robe so he could more easily assemble the studs that were turning into walls around us. This, I thought as I looked around, is what I imagine the kingdom of God looks like. People of all kinds, unitedand delightedby our efforts to create safe, affordable housing for a neighbor in need. We were all motivated to be there on that cold, wet morning by the principles of our faith, which had taught us through different stories and sacred scriptures why we should care about the well-being of a stranger.
As a child, I grew up acting out the story of the good Samaritan (Luke 10:2537) at church camp. Christian Bible verses like love your neighbor as yourself and I was hungry and you gave me food are deeply ingrained in my memory. I felt a call to ministry, in large part, because of the example of clergy and churches in low-income communities that were making a tangible difference in peoples lives.
Although religion gets a lot of negative attention these days for inspiring hatred, violence, and division, in my experience religion moves many more ordinary people to acts of love, generosity, and selflessness every day. The world is filled with young Muslim men like Deah Barakat, a dental student at the University of North Carolina, who was inspired to organize a free dental clinic for Syrian refugees. Tragically, Deah, his wife, and his sister-in-law were killed by a neighbor because of the very religion that taught them to serve others.
When I heard the news about the murder of these three compassionate young people, I felt compelled to do something. I knew Deahs brother, Farris, because we had both helped organize the first Interfaith Habitat for Humanity build in Raleigh, North Carolina. I have been inspired to continue volunteering and speaking out for justice by colleagues and neighbors who are Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, and Buddhist. I have even discovered that my own faith is deepened and renewed by their example and commitment to their faith, as I have worked alongside them. It is my deepest hope that others may also find inspiration for putting their faith into action through the witness of people like Deah, Farris, and the countless other faithful people working to address the problems our communities face.
Diane Faires Beadle loves bringing people of various cultures and faiths together. She volunteers with Habitat for Humanity of Wake Countys annual Interfaith Build. Diane was raised in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and serves as Senior Minister at St. Pauls Christian Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. A graduate of Vanderbilt Divinity School and Rhodes College, Diane was born in Texas, grew up in Germany, and considers Tennessee home. She also has a great love for Sri Lanka, where she spent two years teaching English. She and her husband Michael enjoy hiking, running, cooking spicy foods, and traveling the world.