(CNN) - The pastor of a Florida church says his congregation has decided to call off the burning of the Quran that was to be held Saturday - the ninth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attack on the United States by the al Qaeda terror network.
"We will definitely not burn the Quran," the Rev. Terry Jones told NBC's "Today" on Saturday "Not today, not ever." The burning had been planned for 6 p.m.
Jones arrived in New York late Friday night and was working to set up a meeting with the imam in charge of the Islamic center planned near ground zero. The planned meeting, Jones had said, helped persuade him to halt the burning.
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but no such meeting took place in the end.
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here's what i thought is ridiculous. (i m against being ecumenical) Jesus said, "I am the way, the Truth and the life. no one comes to the Father except through me." we should stop swinging to the other end in reaction to some err we want to counteract!
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/13/churches-read-from-quran-in-face-of-proposed-quran-burning/
Journalist Amy Zerba filed this report from Gainesville, Florida:
Rev. Larry Reimer says there's a simple message at the core of his faith: people have more in common than they have in conflict.
It's one reason he chose to have a passage from the Quran read at the United Church of Gainesville, part of the United Church of Christ, on Sunday.
And he wasn’t alone.
More than 20 religious leaders from Catholic, Protestant, Jewish and Muslim backgrounds around Gainesville had the same Quran passage read - along with Christian and Hebrew scriptures– at their congregations over the weekend. Local synagogues made it part of their Rosh Hashanah celebrations.
It was a sign of unity after weeks of talk by a Florida pastor who threatened to burn the Muslim holy book on 9-11 but who ultimately cancelled the event.
“It just seemed that the reading of Quran was the most affirmative thing we can do,” said Reimer, who has served at the United Church of Gainesville for 36 years. “You might say (we) befriended the Quran and brought it into everyone’s framework, everyone’s point of view.”
Reimer came up with the idea a few days after he learned of the planned Burn A Koran Day from worried parishioners. He approached local religious leaders to join him in reading common Hebrew, Christian and Muslim scriptures at their Sabbath services.
The response from the community was overwhelming positive, he said.
Shanna Johnson, 40, a member of the United Church of Gainesville, said the proposed Quran burning forced the Gainesville community to talk “rationally” with others about different faiths.
“The things that we have in common can really come out in this type of situation,” Johnson said.
Reimer plans to continue connections with clergy from other faiths. A group of religious leaders will meet in October in Gainesville to try to improve interfaith relations.
“My whole ministry, my whole faith is designed around the sense that we have much to learn from each other that we are a common family and that our division is not among religions but it is among fanatics and extremists on both sides that we have to overcome,” Reimer said.
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"Gwendolyn Zoharah Simmons, a professor of religion and African-American studies at the University of Florida, read from a Hebrew Scripture (Deut 6:4-5); a Christian scripture (Matt 22:34) and from the Quran (Aal 'Imran 3:64) during a Sunday service at ehe United Church of Gainesville in Folirda. the common message between the 3 passages was "one God," she said.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! so, these 3 religions are mono-theistic. so? does that mean it's the same?
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