Posted on 05/09/2014 2:08:44 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Pastor says Emirati religious tolerance should be emulated all over world
Abu Dhabi: In many ways its easier being a Christian here than it is back in the United Kingdom, says Reverend Andrew Thompson (MBE), the senior pastor at Abu Dhabis St Andrews Church.
The UAE has always prided itself on its tolerance, with religious freedom enshrined in the constitution. Article 32 states that the freedom to exercise religious worship is guaranteed in accordance with established customs and provided it does not conflict with public policy or violate public morals.
The large Christian expatriate community in Abu Dhabi bears this out, as does the multitude of churches across the country. St Andrews Church, built in Abu Dhabi in 1984, has a congregation of 15,000 worshippers every week.
Speaking to Gulf News, Thompson said the land was gifted to us very generously by the Al Nahyan ruling family.
We receive about 15,000 worshippers every week, were home to many different congregations and at the moment about 73 different churches meet here every week. These include the Church of Pakistan, the Korean Methodist Church, the Greek Orthodox Church and the Seventh Day Adventist Church, among others.
According to Thompson, who has written a book on the subject titled Christianity in the UAE: Culture and Heritage, the roots of the UAEs tolerance towards the Christian community were planted many years ago in a friendship between Shaikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan and Dr Pat Kennedy, a Christian missionary doctor who helped establish the first hospital in the country, the Al Ain Oasis Hospital. Back in the 1950s, infant mortality was incredibly high and so he met Dr Kennedy, who was a Christian medical doctor and invited him to set up the first medical hospital in Al Ain, Thompson said. Within a year the infant mortality rate dropped.
He added that the government gave the land, they gave us visa-granting rights to bring in pastors and priests. They support us by attending some of our major events and we try to reciprocate by being good citizens and being supportive of national events.
The Emirati model of religious freedom is one that should be emulated throughout [the world]. In many ways its easier being a Christian here than it is back in the United Kingdom. Ive lived in many countries in my career and I have to say that the United Arab Emirates, from a Christian leaders point of view, is probably the easiest country Ive lived in.
Another church in Abu Dhabi is the Evangelical Community Church, with roots going back to 1972.
Cameron Arsensen, the serving pastor of the church, said: The Evangelical Community Church was started in 1972 by a small group of English-speaking expatriate Christians who desired to worship and pray together. The church worshipped in a home for years before being given property by the Rulers.
The Evangelical Community Church has approximately 1,300 worshippers on a weekly basis. In addition, there are over 60 other congregations that gather weekly to worship at the Evangelical Church to worship in different languages.
Abu Dhabi has been very tolerant in allowing Christians to worship. Abu Dhabi and the UAE remains an oasis of tolerance for people from many faiths to practice their beliefs. We are grateful to the Rulers of this nation for their model and wise leadership in this regard.
Place the United Kingdom on a suicide watch.
Wow an Arab majority country that we western Christians (and hopefully Jewish people as well) actually would feel welcome in!? What are the odds..
Wow. What does that tell you? Even if he’s exaggerating a little bit, there is likely some truth in his statements. The U.K., like many host countries, will not aggressively defend the everyday rights of Christians and Jews to move about and express themselves with out violent harassment or verbal abuse. There are entire neighbor hoods in France their police are afraid to enter, as the territory ‘belongs’ to the Muslim Youth. Of course there is much land in parts of Arizona now closed off to the public because the new squatter tenants, the Mexican Drug Gangs have moved in.
I worked with a fellow from the UAE a few years back and aside from being a perfectly fine fellow, his attitude toward religion was exceptionally tolerant, and I attribute that to his being from the UAE.
I asked him about the Saudis, and he rolled his eyes and said, “Well, yes...the Saudis are quite the embarrassment.”
There seemed to be little love lost in his view of the Saudis. I’ve seen similar disdain for the Saudis among Turks as well; they tend to view the Saudis (and particularly Salafists/Wahabbis) as rigidly dogmatic and unyielding kooks. They tend to view them as fanatics - of course, there’s that whole Ottoman history as well as a basic conflict between Wahabbists and Sufis (and Sufism is quite popular in Turkey; indeed, that’s sort of the modern epicenter of Sufism).
How come the terrorists never bomb their buildings??
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