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Counter-Community as Moral Community: The Church’s Contribution to Public Civility
Author(s) -
Dionius Bismoko Mahamboro
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
melintas : an international journal of philosophy and religion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2406-8098
DOI - 10.26593/mel.v34i2.3387.117-128
Subject(s) - bishops , civility , indonesian , worry , prejudice (legal term) , relevance (law) , order (exchange) , sociology , law , political science , psychology , philosophy , politics , linguistics , finance , psychiatry , economics , anxiety
Indonesia is a home of various religions and traditional beliefs. However, from the time before the fall of the New Order in 1998 up to now the coexistence of followers of different religions cannot be said to be without problems. The 2004 Indonesian Bishops’ Conference’s pastoral notes reflect the worry that the peaceful coexistence among different religious followers is failing. Nevertheless, the document’s dominant node is expressed in positive attitude and hope. The Indonesian Bishops’ Conference encourages all Christian communities to develop themselves into ‘counter-communities’. This article is aimed at discovering the relevance of the idea ‘counter-communities’ to the problems of coexistence of different religious followers in the Post-New-Order era, which now has been marked with prejudice and mistrust.

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