Join Downtown

Downtown is home to a large community of dynamic people from every walk of life. By creating an account, you can:

  • Organize culturally, socially, and politically
  • Discuss meaningful topics
  • Meet new people
  • Discover music and entertainment

Don't have an account?

Sign Up Now

Already a citizen?

to Nuzizo.com


"When Will the World Learn?"

Why not let people differ about their answers to the great mysteries of the Universe?

"Why not let people differ about their answers to the great mysteries of the Universe? Let each seek one's own way to the highest, to one's own sense of supreme loyalty in life, one's ideal of life. Let each philosophy, each world-view bring forth its truth and beauty to a larger perspective, that people may grow in vision, stature and dedication.

The religions of humanity should be a unifying force, for all the great religions reveal a basic unity in ethics. Whether it be Judaism, Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Islam or Confucianism, all grow out of a sense of the sacredness of human life. This moral sensitivity to the sacredness of human personality -- the Commandments not to kill, not to hurt, not to put a stumbling block in the path of the blind, not to neglect the widow or the fatherless, not to exploit the servant or the worker -- all this can be found in the Bibles of humanity, in all the sacred books. All teach in substance: "Do unto others as you would that others should do unto you." There is, then, a basic unity among the great religions in the matter of ethics. True, there are religious philosophies which turn people away from the world, from the here and now, concentrating life-purposes on salvation for one's self or a mystic union with some supernatural reality. But most of the great religions agree on mercy, justice, love -- here on earth. And they agree that the great task is to move people from apathy, from an acceptance of the evils in life, to face the possibilities of the world, to make life sweet for one another instead of bitter. This is the unifying ethical task of all the religions -- yes, of all the philosophies of humankind. There is no need to force our own theological points of view upon one another or to insist that the moral life grows out of final, absolute authority.
Algernon Black

Comments (3)

princesstamtam

princesstamtam wrote on Mar 11, 01:04 PM

Wink

gin_0

gin_0 wrote on Mar 11, 02:59 PM

Incredible post! Wow! and a big yep yep yep!

siamiyami

siamiyami wrote on Mar 11, 07:15 PM

I totally agree with this.  Great post, Idan.

Please login or register to submit a comment.

What can you do with a Nuzizo account?

  • Share your opinions and interests with others in the city.
  • Create a network of friends in a Nuzizo Neighborhood.
  • Build Reputation and Rank to control popular content in the city.
Vote for this!

Voted 0 times with a total of 0 votes.

By voting, you determine the top content for your neighborhood and the city. The higher your rank, the more your vote counts.

This entry was posted on Sunday, March 11, 12:24 PM and tagged with catholicism, islam, judaism, protestantism. It has been viewed 90 times and received 3 comments. 1 members have it in their favorites

Public

Bookmark on