By Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Rabbi Peter Rubinstein, Reverend James A. Kowalski, and Imam Shamsi Ali
As we approach the holiday season, the excitement builds — this time of year gives us breaks from school and vacations from work. Time to gather with those we love, to watch a parade or a football game, and to share festive meals. These are occasions to express gratitude to God and people we cherish — and to reflect, as families and communities, on the gifts we have and too often take for granted.
This time of year often affords us opportunities to share a table with people of different views and opinions and backgrounds. We are not always good at doing that right now. Powerful forces are deliberately and insidiously working to divide us, at home and around the world. More than ever we need to commit ourselves to what unites us across cultures, geographies and faiths. Among the most meaningful and enduring of those unifying forces is the power of giving.
Giving — the act of taking care of one another — is fundamental to faith traditions because it is the embodiment of our shared humanity. Our traditions of giving endure because they require us, in a very tangible way, to look beyond ourselves — at least for that moment — as we recognize a need in another person. When we see “the other” as human we are emboldened to act to alleviate that need.
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Giving elevates us out of our own wants and needs, out of our busy-ness, out of our preconceived judgments. It compels us to recognize the power in each of us to make the world better and more hospitable for all humanity — the best legacy we can leave to our children. And when we reach across that divide, when the person in need becomes a fellow human, humanity is elevated.
Religious traditions use various words for giving: “Philanthropy,” from the Greek words “love” and “man” (or “human”); “Charity” from “caritas,” something of value that is dear. The Hebrew, “Tzedakah,” derives from the word for justice, or righteousness. In Islam, one of the five pillars of the faith is “Zakat,” giving to the needy, from the words for purification and growth. Some faith traditions see giving as an expression of love, while others view it as a mandate — a requirement of living a just life.









