Today, pause to remember the men and women who died fighting America’s battles. Their goal was to stop tyrants and regimes that treat people like insignificant, disposable, unworthy non-humans. This was their contribution to upholding the dignity of man and working toward peace. A fitting memorial to them is to carry on their mission. Not fighting in a far-away land but living our daily lives as though those around us, those of different skin colors, religions, socio-economic status–everyone–were human beings. Such a peaceful, tolerant attitude must start with us individually, in our homes, schools, and workplaces and spread to our cities, states, nation, and, ultimately, the world. Maybe such a global attitude will prevent tyrants and hate-groups from getting a foothold. Yes, this is idealistic, but so were all those who died in uniform. Carrying on their idealism is an appropriate way to honor them. Even if we succeed in making a more peaceful, tolerant world just in our own lives, that is a tribute to the principle they fought for.
Tag Archive for religion
Misguided Religious Views
Some religions want to destroy us, because we’re so different from them. Thank God Christians have the Golden Rule. Then, again, it appears in the sacred writings of most religions, commanding followers to show compassion and mercy. But we have the 10 Commandments. Which came from the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) and are spread throughout the Qur’an. Jesus emphasized caring for the poor and vulnerable. Mmmm…there are those other statements: “the key of Paradise is love for the poor” (Islam); “rescue the weak and needy” (Judaism); “give, even though it be little” (Buddhism); give “to the homeless, distressed man” (Hinduism). And all major religions either support organ donation or declare it a personal decision. Could it be that the violence in our world is caused by misguided individuals, not by people trying to live out the positive beliefs of their faith? And by people who fear religions because they don’t understand them? We should celebrate our sameness allow our diverse family to come together. That should defeat the misguided few and those who perpetuate violence against people of other faiths.
What Jesus, Buddha, & Muhammad Shared in Common
Today’s Thursday Thought quote is an important, yet basic, message from three of the world’s great religious leaders.
An Enlightening Idea
Today’s Thursday Thought quote makes SO much sense! Worth remembering when we find ourselves criticizing other religions.
Inter-Religious Peace
All the news stories about people angry at religious attire someone wears, or their beliefs or way of worshiping have made me realize one thing: that we need to educate yourselves. So I propose this to you:
Sit back in your easy chair and learn about how other people worship. Read books, articles, and the weekly Religion section in the Sunday paper. Watch “Religion and Ethics Newsweekly” on PBS or record it for more convenient viewing. Want to get out of the house? Visit a synagogue, temple, or mosque, or go to a worship service there. Attend a class in a certain faith or comparative faiths. Research a faith in the public library or online. Look in the newspaper under “Lectures” and “Events” for a festival or celebration hosted by another faith, then go and enjoy yourself. No matter what you do, learning about another’s faith strengthens your own while fostering understanding in you–and that understanding helps make us all part of the Human Family.
Being Tricky Today
Enjoy the fun of this April Fools Day, but, please, consider the person you’re pranking. We’ve all been the butt of cruel April Fools jokes that have humiliated us, or watched jokes pulled on others that were obviously an expression of the jokester’s prejudices, using the day as an excuse. These tricks not only feel bad but seem to give some legitimacy to cruelty and prejudices.
There are so many pranks that are harmless and so ingrained in our culture that few people are terribly embarrassed by them, like the Whoopie Cushion, switching the Push and Pull signs on a door, and putting hundreds of post-its all around someone’s office.
But something that is dangerous, will clearly mortify someone, makes a person look stupid, or is based on ethnics, gender, religion, or sexual orientation is not okay. And that means no posting of the victim online, which makes it even worse.
So, go ahead and enjoy the day. But be mindful of the person you’re pranking and how it will affect him or her. Remember that your joke reflects who you are as a person.
A Gentle Reminder
Today just seemed a good day for the reminder that this Thursday Thought quote gives us:
“Love has no gender – compassion has no religion – character has no race.” — Abhijit Naskar
I Am Deeply Moved
They’re just kids from a small country that has no real influence in the world. But we came together–from many countries–to save them because of one universal belief: everyone’s child is MY child. Our feelings are stirred because that could be our biological child, or a relative’s, or a friend’s. At that point, nobody cares if the child lives in a nation that’s hostile to us or whose government or ideology is opposed to ours. We don’t care about the color or religion of the child. We just…care.
The Thailand cave rescue of those dozen kids and their soccer coach deeply moved me. And it reminded me that we don’t need to be at each other’s throats in this world, that we can come together. I hope that spirit lingers and spreads throughout the world.
Why Hate
The FBI just came out with a report on hate crimes in the U.S. in 2016. They cited 6,121 cases during the year, BUT those were the ones that were reported and rose to the legal level of being criminal incidents. How many more were there, I wonder. Far too many.
So why do people commit hate crimes to begin with? The FBI broke it down into three major categories: 57.5% were motivated by race, 21% by religion, and 17.7% by sexual orientation.
Are we so afraid of people of different races and religions and sexual orientations other than our own? Are they, simply because of those differences, out to get us? Of course not. So why are we out to get them?
Something to think about.
April Fool!
Tomorrow is April Fool’s Day weekend. Enjoy the fun, but, please, consider the person you’re pranking. We’ve all been the butt of cruel April Fools jokes that have humiliated us, or watched jokes pulled on others that were obviously an expression of the jokester’s prejudices, using the day as an excuse. These tricks not only feel bad but seem to give some legitimacy to cruelty and bigotries. There are so many pranks that are harmless and so ingrained in our culture that few people are terribly embarrassed by them, like the whoopie cushion, switching the Push and Pull signs on a door, and putting hundreds of post-its all around someone’s office. But something that is dangerous, will clearly mortify someone, makes a person look stupid, or is based on ethnics, gender, religion, or sexual orientation is not okay. And that means no posting of the victim online, which makes it even worse. So, go ahead and enjoy. But be mindful of the person you’re pranking and how it will affect him or her. Remember that your joke reflects who you are as a person.