I have a sneaking suspicion that all religions lead to the same place, a very unified place.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In principle the great religions of the world do not differ as much as they appear to.
I feel all the religions should be able to co-exist if the various factions would be willing to respect and learn from each other's faiths.
The essence of all religions is one. Only their approaches are different.
The Christian religion, though scattered and abroad will in the end gather itself together at the foot of the cross.
I concluded that all religions had the same foundation - a belief in the supernatural - a power above nature that man could influence by worship - by sacrifice and prayer.
There is a great interest in comparative religion and a desire to understand faiths other than our own and even to experiment with exotic cults.
There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it.
All... religions show the same disparity between belief and practice, and each is safe till it tries to exclude the rest.
All religions develop, become exclusive, become divisive and quarrelsome.
My premise is that the popular aphorism that 'all religions are fundamentally the same and only superficially different' simply is not true. It is more correct to say that all religions are, at best, superficially similar but fundamentally different.