"The problem is for us all to learn to live together with our different traditions and to live not only without bloodshed, but in genuine peace, which implies some sort of mutual trust and active sympathy. It is of no use to talk about loving our neighbor while at the same time dismissing as inferior or mistaken his most cherished possession, his religious faith. Indeed, it is the transforming power of religious faith which offers the only hope out of our present impasse, and so a significant aspect of the great task before us is to come increasingly to discover how the world’s faiths can nourish each other and how we can collaborate with all people of faith in the challenge we face together."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Seeger
Something that has been in my mind for as long as I remember, nodded at by Muslims, Catholics, Sikhs, Methodists and agnostics: different roads, some junctions, same destination. The junctions are interesting.
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