Following is an omnibus response to Cynthia Stephen's piece on anti-Christain 
violence inOrissa, Karnataka etc. It may be recalled that I forwarded some time 
ago the full text of the fact-finding-team's report on Mangalore violence 
contents of which Cynthia doesn't seem to have read, may be because the report 
itself is not to the liking of the fanatic secular terrorists.

p.n.benjamin

here're some of my stray thoughts on the above issues.


A BLESSING IN DISGUISE"Driven by the drumbeat of what it sees as a hostile 
propaganda against their beliefs and values in the name of secularism, Hindus 
are beginning to gravitate towards extremism". It is all very well for vested 
interests to play the communal card. But this will not pay. Communalism of the 
minorities will only make the majority community more fanatic..HIRELINGSLet 
there be no doubt that the Christian leaders are mere hirelings who have turned 
churches and its institutions into dens of thieves. They have bartered away 
Christ for a fistful of dollars, living in mansions while Christ’s poor go 
without a covering on their head; enjoying the flesh-pots while the flocks lead 
a hand-to-mouth existence. No wonder they want to maintain the status-quo. No 
wonder they want no government auditing. No wonder they cry wolf against the 
Hindutva brigade. No wonder they do not even want the laity to know – our 
ignorance is their bliss.There was once a Jesus Christ who walked this earth as 
the Good Shepherd. And He died on a wooden cross. Today his representatives on 
earth fly around the world wearing gold crosses around their neck. What a 
mockery of the Master! But why should I forgive them when they know exactly 
what they are doing? They are trying to fool the naïve people 
like….!Christianity in today’s India with a renascent Hinduism faces an 
unprecedented crisis. If it is alive to the situation and sensitive to the 
signs of time, it has to rethink itself, reorient itself, and rediscover its 
basic substance and interpret that in terms acceptable to the Indian mind and 
genius, wrote Prof. S.K.George, in the Niyogi Commission Report in early 1950s. 
His words are relevant today more than ever before.Christians form just about 
3% of the Indian population. "Very often they have to depend not so much on 
their rights as on the goodwill and generosity of powerful majority Hindu 
community. Christians in India are dependent in a double sense, on the goodwill 
of the Hindus and on the churches in the West whose fellowship sustains them 
and whose affluence often supports them. Judging from numbers there is hardly 
any equality in relationship. But Christians in India can play a creative and 
critical role in the life of our nation. What matters most is the quality of 
their life as Christians and the courage of their faith". (Dr. Samartha, 
Courage for Dialogue).The attitudes Indian Christians have inherited towards 
neighbours of other faiths were very largely shaped in the colonial era, with 
Europe dominated history, church-centred theology, and unexamined assumptions 
of Western superiority in race, culture, and religion. The church in India 
should give up this posture and should have the courage to reject past errors 
and seek new ways of relationships with their neighbours. The right to profess, 
practise and propagate one’s faith should be used faithfully and responsibly, 
not in an aggressive and flamboyant style. Highly organized missionary 
activities, supported by vast sums of money from abroad, using expensive mass 
advertising techniques, loudly proclaiming the word to large crowds, quite 
often by preachers from outside whose knowledge of the people’s religion and 
culture is limited – do these constitute the way of Christ? Our neighbours in 
the community should be regarded not as statistics but as persons, not as 
potential recruits to the kingdom but as partners in common enterprises in the 
community."The ‘onlyness’.The most precious freedom that Indian Christians 
enjoy is to hold Jesus Christ as their saviour, as the Son of God, as the "only 
true divinity". It is their absolute right to cherish that belief – and if any 
Hindu outfit or government tries to impeach upon that liberty, then definitely, 
Indian Christians should fight tooth and nail for their religious privileges. 
They would be justified to speak about Hindu fundamentalism, saffron brigade or 
Hindutva. But the moment Christianity tries to impose this belief of only one 
true God- Jesus Christ- on the world, then it is itself impeaching upon the 
freedom of others. For this belief of only-ness of our God as the real one and 
all others are false is at the root of many misunderstandings, wars and 
terrorism.Attacks against ChristiansLike most of those who have regular columns 
to write to newspapers and need factual information, I keep my personal file of 
clippings so I don’t slip up on accuracy. The violent attacks against 
Christians have been going on for the past several years. Sister Rani Maria was 
stabbed inside a bus and murdered in February 1994 in Madhya Pradesh. A 
helpless Father Christudass was hit on the head, punched and kicked, stripped 
naked, scissored up his hair, ashed his face and garlanded with chapels and 
shoes, and paraded naked on the streets of Guhiajori in Bihar in 1997.Three 
Catholic priests, Lawrence, Joseph and Anup were shot dead in 1994 in Gumla, 
again in Bihar. The headless, tortured body of Father A. T. Thomas, Jesuit 
priest and liberation theologian, was discovered in the jungles of Hazaribagh 
in Bihar in 1997. All these and many more happened before the BJP-led 
government came to power. Why didn’t we unleash a nation-wide protest and send 
investigation teams?Ghastly murderThere is no doubt that the ghastly murder of 
Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two sons needed to be universally 
condemned and the culprits severely punished. But the massive outcry it had 
evoked raised a fundamental question in my mind: Is the life of a white man 
more important and dear to Indian Christians than the lives of hundreds of 
innocent Indians – men, women and children – killed by militants in various 
parts of the country? Have we, as Christians, ever condemned such killings? Or 
the unending massacres of innocent Dalits all over the country at regular 
intervals? Does it mean that the value of a life depends on the religion to 
which that person belongs? Are some lives expendable and others accountable? 
This is a blatant discrimination. Should human suffering, loss of lives be 
barters in the hands of foreign-funded organisations to embarrass Hindus?As 
true followers of the Prince of Peace, the Christians in India should have 
forgiven the criminals and forgotten the incident the moment the saintly widow, 
Gladys Staines said: "In the name of Jesus I forgive those who committed this 
crime and may they experience in their hearts God’s forgiving love". She was 
witnessing Christ in the darkest moment in her life. But, instead of following 
her example, the Christians have been spreading hatred, like butter on hot 
bread, against the Hindus, especially against the Sangh Parivar. Many 
Christians have made millions of dollars in the name of Staines’ murder. They 
have cynically used the Staines’ murder for far too long. They must remember: 
"Kindle not the coals of sinners by rebuking them, lest thou be burnt with the 
flame of the fire of their sins." (Ecclesiastics, viiiMilitary enterprise?Terms 
such as "evangelistic campaign", "missionary strategy", "campus crusade", 
"occupying non-Christian areas", a "blitzkrieg" of missionaries, and sending 
"reinforcements" sound more appropriate to military enterprises than to 
Christian witness to God’s redeeming love in Jesus Christ. The statistical 
approach implied in the words "the unreached millions" is derogatory to 
neighbours of other faiths."Unreached" by whom? When Indian Christians 
themselves use these phrases, which have originated outside the country, to 
describe their neighbours living next door to them in the community, Christians 
should not be surprised if thenehigbours are offendedThe real source of danger 
to the Indian Christian community is not the handful of Hindu extremists. Most 
of the violent incidents have been due to aggressive evangelising. Other than 
this there have been few attacks on Christians. Finally the sensitive and 
sensible Christians must realize that acts of certain "born-again" varieties of 
Christian evangelists who denigrate Hindu gods and abuse Hindu rituals as 
barbaric are the root cause of tension between Christian and Hindu communities. 
Christian leaders known for their erudition, equipoise and empathy should come 
out in the open to disown such acts of intolerance.The Commission to preach the 
gospel is usually quoted by all Christian groups. But they conveniently ignore 
the fact that there are other very important elements in the teachings of 
Christ. "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth where moth and rust do 
corrupt but lay up your treasures in heaven…You cannot serve God and 
Mammon…Forgive your brother not seven times but seventy times seven. Love your 
enemy. Love one another as I have loved you".Such teachings should have led to 
the formation of a distinctive life-style based on simplicity and integrity and 
total non-acquisitiveness. But we do not find Christians any different from 
others. They go to law over property disputes. They sell their sons and 
daughters for specific sums of money in the marriage market. They accept bribes 
and play the game of money and power as assiduously as any one else.Unless 
Christians share the sufferings of the people they have no word of the gospel 
to them, whatever true things Christians might say. Revival songs they sing, 
long prayers they pray and long sermons they preach amount to lip-religion and 
at the same time Christians swallow widows’ houses. This is how Jesus 
characterizes hypocrisy. This is an old phenomenon where integrity of life and 
the truth of words don’t conform to one another. Life does not confirm the 
words Christians speak. Jesus described it as hypocrisy and created enemies who 
encompassed His death.If Christians as a community took the teachings of Christ 
seriously they would be justified in preaching. To preach what they do not 
practise is to put the cart before the horse. Let your light so shine before 
men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.One 
last point. Christ himself said: "You encompass sea and land to make one 
convert and then you make him twice the son of hell as you are". Dalit/Tribal 
Christians’ conversion to Christianity has meant nothing but substitution of 
social discrimination within the Churches for discrimination within the Hindu 
society.P.N.BENJAMINCoordinatorBangalore Initiative for Religious Dialogue 
(BIRD) 

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