How to start a CHAI Kindred Center
A Brief Recipe
Peter Ochs, University of Virginia
- Scriptural Study for the sake of peace
The method of CHAI is strictly one of scriptural study: to draw a small
group of participants into religious dialogue and friendship through close
textual study and interpretation of passages from each of their sacred
scriptures: Bible (Tanakh or Hebrew Bible), New Testament, and Qur'an.
The point is not to rush to locate THE meaning of these passages, nor to
rush to find sources of peace in the literal messages of the texts.
It is, instead, to foster relations among the participants, so that these
relations will become sources of peace and deeper understanding. As
used here, the term "relations" refers to several kinds of interaction,
and each of them is vital to the success of CHAI:
- "Religious Relations": a CHAI center should be a place of sanctity,
in which participants come to honor all three scriptural traditions as
witnesses to the work of God in the world and to honor one another as
witnesses to faith in God's work.
- "Study Relations": CHAI participants come together to study
Scripture: to share with others the wonders of their own sacred texts;
to enjoy learning about the other text traditions; and also to achieve
the mutual trust that, as a group, they can eventually study all three
scriptural sources, side by side, as subjects of group inquiry. There
is therefore a dual goal: to respect the sanctity of the scriptural
texts and traditions while also discovering that careful and open study
and dialogue is part of that sanctity. The second goal is truly to press
for understanding and to open the texts to intellectual-and-religious
inquiry that goes beyond mere liturgical "wonder" about the texts
(see more below).
- "Friendship Relations": a CHAI center should be an environment of
deepening friendship among all participants. The deep levels of study
that CHAI seeks can be achieved only in an environment of deep trust.
This comes only gradually: the more participants trust one another's
faith and good will, the more they can open dialogue with one another
about the troubling as well as the wondrous dimensions of the text
traditions.
- Kinds of CHAI centers.
There are several ways to organize a Kindred Center of CHAI. All groups should
seek representation from each of the three Abrahamic traditions, Jewish,
Christian and Muslim. A group may begin, however, with representation from
only two of these traditions, in the hopes of eventually finding participants
from the third. Representation should be, roughly, equal, but, again, local
conditions will influence the exact mixture. The most important factor is to
locate participants who share in the goals and methods of CHAI and, then, to
seek representatives from each group. The goal of CHAI is not simply dialogue
among Jews, Christians, and Muslims. The first priority is to locate folks
motivated to pursue scriptural study together, then to find folks who bring
sufficient familiarity with the sources (not expertise, just familiarity -
although the group will leaders with some expertise), then to find folks from
at least two and eventually all three traditions. The ideal size of all groups
is from 5 to 15 participants. (also linked groups)
- CHAI University Centers gather together groups of faculty or students
or a mixture of faculty and students. The intellectual intensity of study
should reflect the character of the participants. Faculty may be more
motivated to historical as well as rhetorical text study; students may be
more motivated to study general themes.
- CHAI Clergy Centers gather together religious leaders from the three
(or at least two) traditions. If it is of interest to the clergy, these
groups may also include faculty from local colleges/seminaries or more
learned members of their congregations.
- CHAI Community Centers gather together clergy leaders and/or faculty
leaders with members of local congregations who are motivated for CHAI
study and who bring at least some familiarity with their scriptural
traditions. Group leaders (clergy or a combination of clergy with some
faculty) should meet together first to decide how they would like to
compose their groups: focusing, for example, simply on more learned members
of their congregations, or on political, civic, and business leaders who are
also active members of the congregations. One goal of CHAI is to nurture
many small Centers that nurture close relations among scripture-readers
among the congregations. Another goal - and one of the main political goals
of CHAI - is to gather community leaders (business, political, civic) from
all three traditions, so that the Centers can eventually become centers of
political and civic judgment as well as religious study.
- How to begin.
For the sake of illustration, we will take the example of a CHAI Community
Center led by local clergy or religious leaders, with consultation from CHAI
faculty members at nearby colleges. The following sequence is therefore only
illustrative of many ways a CHAI group might begin:
- Before beginning a Community center, clerical leaders have met together
for 6 months of scriptural study and dialogue with some local CHAI faculty.
During this period of monthly study sessions (1 ½ hrs each), they developed
a group, if still early, sense of the meaning of "scriptural reasoning"
(see below). They then made plans for a community group.
- A group of three clerical leaders (Muslim, Jewish, and Christian)
decided to invite 3-4 folks from each their religious communities to meet
every 2 months for CHAI study. The congregational groups decided to meet,
first, by themselves for one or two sessions of study within their own
scriptural tradition. This was to give them some sense of confidence in
their "own" tradition of study. Then they held an initial meeting of the
Community Center.
- For an example of how to select topics and texts for study, see the
illustration by Michael Cartwright. Some CHAI
groups have selected texts that touch on themes of "hospitality"; some have
chosen texts from the Abraham stories in all three scriptural traditions;
some chose themes of "song and psalms," and so on. The idea is to begin
with brief textual selections, so that study can proceed with care for
each sentence, as opposed to hasty studies of "themes." After a few meetings,
it may be good to bring in examples of traditional readings of these texts,
from sources in the rabbinic, patristic and haddith literatures; or also
contemporary readings if that fits the style of a given group.
- Most sessions began with brief (5 minute) introductions to each
tradition's text selection by a member of that tradition. Introductions
may focus on the tradition's sense of the "plain sense" of the text, on
some historical-critical treatments (if the group is open to that), and on
the presenter's own initial responses to the text - for example, sharing
thoughts about what is religiously engaging in the text and also raising
questions about what may be challenging, both for co-religionists and for
members of the other religions.
- Group leaders do not offer lengthy presentations of their own: the goal
is not to teach one another "the truth" of the texts, but to offer enough
learned background on the texts that dialogue can be deep and lively without
wholly misrepresenting any tradition's sense of the text.
- After about 45 minutes into each session, the group should be engaging
in a free exchange of readings and interpretations of all three text
selections. Group leaders should gently nudge the group toward some
overall reflections toward the last ½ hour of each sessions: reflections
on the general themes of the day's readings, on shared insights, and on
challenges.
- After about three sessions of this kind, a successful group should
begin to nurture a sense of friendship in study and an emergent sense of
direction: how this particular group may want to direct its future study.
At this point, we recommend some interaction among group leaders and
consultants from the CHAI board of directors, to discuss the next stage of
group study. The group, for example, may want to plan a year of study
along some developing textual theme, or to work gradually to insights
into some communal or political or ethical theme.
- A note on Student/Faculty Groups
At the University of Virginia, our Charlotttesville Community Center began
after we nurtured a Faculty-Grad Student Center and another Undergraduate Center.
The Faculty-Grad Center met monthy for studies that parallel the national
meetings of the Society for Scriptural Reasoning (see the journal issues based
on such meetings, at
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/journals/ssr). The Undergrad Center has
been less focused on scriptural study as its only work. Instead, more reflective
of student learning and interests, it has sponsored four areas of work:
a)"Abrahamic theo-politics" At bi-weekly meetings, the Center invites
faculty from the different traditions and also from Government and from
History departments to offer presentations and discussions in different
issues arising from Abrahamic religion and international political relations;
b) "Chai Study" Once a month, students gather with a faculty or grad student
leader for study of scriptural sources. Since most students have limited
textual background, these sessions are partially introductory, partially
expressive of the methods discussed elsewhere in this overview;
c) "Religion, Violence and Peace": Every two months, the group meets with
representatives of all religion groups on campus for programs that examine
how the world's religions contribute to both peace and war around the world;
d) "A New Undergrad Course on Abrahamic Theo-politics" Aided by a grant
by UVA's Center for Religion and Democracy, students and a faculty advisor
also met monthly to plan a new Religious Studies/Government Course that
examined theopolitical traditions in the three religions and how contemporary
studies of International Relations can both come to draw more on,
and contribute more to the study of these traditions.
- Scriptural Reasoning
CHAI scholars label the process of CHAI study "scriptural reasoning." For
discussions of what this means, group leaders should consult the website and
electronic Journal of Scriptural Reasoning
in addition to the CHAI website.
- Registering a Kindred CHAI Center.
The CHAI Institute requests that participating Centers register with the
international organization as an official "Kindred Center."
Such registry will entitle the Center to make use of the name "CHAI"
(or Children of Abraham Institute), to make use of CHAI websites and
instructional materials, to consult with CHAI board members about how to
nurture their centers, and to join the web-Network of CHAI Centers. As
members of the web-Network, all participants in the Center may interact
with other CHAI participants internationally: discussing the work of their
centers, debating major issues facing Abrahamic groups, and joining
international peace projects in CHAI. Center leaders will also be invited to
contribute to CHAI and Scriptural Reasoning journal issues and regional or i
nternational meetings.
To obtain registry, a local CHAI Center should:
- Submit brief registration forms to be provided by the CHAI Co-directors;
- Gather annual dues from each local Center participant: part of the dues
will be used locally for Center expenses, part will go toward the annual
Kindred Center dues, to be center to the CHAI Institute.
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