Bishop Kieran Conry of Arundel and Brighton has written a pastoral
letter urging Catholics in his diocese to reach out to Muslims.
In the letter he quoted from the Second Vatican Council’s declaration
on non-Christian religions, Nostra Aetate, which said: “The Catholic
Church rejects nothing of what is true and holy in these religions.”
Bishop Conry wrote: “These words and sentiments are very important
for our time, when latent suspicions and hostility can easily be brought
to the surface again by tragic events like the murder of Drummer Lee
Rigby in Woolwich.”
He continued: “I am writing this on the first day of the Muslim holy
season of Ramadan. I ask that you accept this urge to dialogue, so that
at least we might understand one another more.
“Very often our image of Islam is simply the one presented by the
media, and how often do we complain that the media view distorts the
reality of the Catholic Church? We must not in our minds associate the
word ‘Muslim’ with any of the negative and pejorative terms often linked
to it in the media.”
He said that inter-religious dialogue was “not just a dialogue of charity”, but also a “dialogue of hope.”
“Hope and trust in God who wills all people to be saved and who, in
Christ and the Holy Spirit, is already at work in all that is true and
holy in other religions,” said Bishop Conry.