The Ecumenical Patriarch explained what unites God, Allah, Brahman, and the Luminous Void.
July 29, 2025
On July 29, 2025, in Istanbul,
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew delivered a keynote address at the Meeting of
the World Council of Religions for Peace titled “Contradictions
and Preconditions of Interreligious Dialogue,” in which he presented a vision
for the creation of a “common sacred worldview” as a response to the challenges
of the modern world.
(https://ec-patr.org/keynote-address-by-his-all-holiness-ecumenical-patriarch-bartholomew-at-the-meeting-of-the-world-council-of-religions-for-peace-istanbul-july-29-2025/)
Patriarch Bartholomew identified
the primary problem of our time as the dominance of a “reductive materialist
worldview” which, he said, “reduces human flourishing exclusively to its
material dimension and systematically excludes any reference to the Sacred.”
According to the Patriarch, this
worldview leads to the “distortion of the concept of human completeness” which
in turn “promotes isolation, exploitation, and environmental destruction.” In
such a paradigm, “ceases to be conceived as a relational being, founded on a
transcendent reality, and is converted into an autonomous unit that claims its
well-being at the expense of others and of the natural world.”
As a countermeasure, Patriarch
Bartholomew proposed the creation of a “common sacred worldview” – a framework
intended to serve as “a theoretical foundation for collective sacred
flourishing.” He emphasized that this is not “an attempt to create a new, syncretistic
religion, nor a substitution for the unique worldviews that characterise each
religious tradition.”
“This framework is articulated
around four fundamental pillars, which constitute a holistic view of reality.
At the centre lies the Sacred itself, the ultimate, absolute reality, which is
expressed in various ways, as God, Allah, Brahman or as the Luminous Void,” the
Patriarch said. He explained that human beings are “by definition relational,
precisely because they are founded on the Sacred.”
He noted that the power of such a
“common sacred worldview” lies “in the attempt to bridge the chasm between
faith and science.”
“Drawing from the modern
discoveries of quantum mechanics and biology, it challenges the dominant
mechanistic models of the universe, projecting instead an image of
purposefulness and interconnected wholeness that coordinates with the spiritual
perspectives,” Patriarch Bartholomew declared.
He further stressed that “the
polyphony of religions, like the multiplicity of languages, is a barrier that
must be overcome.”
According to the Patriarch, the
aim of this “common sacred worldview” is “the creation of a meta-linguistic
system of reference, of a meeting place that will permit the 'translation' of
the individual sacred truths into a commonly understood terminology, capable of
articulating speech towards the contemporary world.”
“We are not called, therefore, to
compose a new global religion of consensus. We are called, each from the
standpoint of his faith, to constitute a global alliance of conscience, a
prophetic testimony that will keep open the horizon of transcendence in a world
threatened with asphyxiation within the confines of the material. Our unity is
not founded on what we believe in common, but on our common love for humanity
and on our common reference to the mystery of the one God. This is the only
viable peace,” concluded Patriarch Bartholomew.
Earlier, the UOJ reported that
Archbishop Elpidophoros of the Constantinople Patriarchate stated that all religions
are myriad paths leading to the one God:
https://spzh.eu/en/news/81329-fanar-vse-religii--eto-miriady-tropinok-vedushhije-k-odnomu-bogu
Source: https://spzh.eu/en/news/87431-patriarch-bartholomew-speaks-of-creating-a-common-sacred-worldview
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