Is a certain religion important or is it living it which is important? A person
belongs perhaps to the best religion there is in the world. He does not live it,
but he belongs to it. He says that he is a Muslim or a Christian or a Jew. He is
sure that it is the best religion, but at the same time he does not care to live
it. He just belongs to it and thinks that belonging to a certain accepted
religion is all that is needed. People of all different religions have made it
appear to be so, owing to their enthusiasm and forced by their mission in life.
They have made facilities for those who belong to their religion, saying that by
the very fact of their belonging to that particular religion they will be saved
on the Day of Judgement, while the others with all their good actions will not
be saved, because they do not belong to that particular religion.
This is a man-made idea, not God-made. God is not the Father of one section, God
is the Father of the whole world and all are entitled to be called His children,
whether worthy or unworthy. In fact, it is man's attitude towards God and truth
which can bring him closer to God, and which is the ideal of every soul. If this
attitude is not developed, then whatever a man's religion may be, he has failed
to live it. Therefore, what is important in life is to try and live the religion
to which one belongs, or that one esteems, or that one believes to be one's
religion.
One must always know that religion has a body and has a soul. Whatever body of
religion you may touch, you touch the soul. But if you touch the soul, you touch
all its bodies, which are like its organs. And all the organs constitute one
body, which is the body of the religion - the religion of Alpha and Omega, which
was, which is and which will always be. Therefore in the path of religion the
dispute "I am right and you are wrong" is not necessary. We do not know what is
in the heart of man. If outwardly he seems to be a Jew, a Christian, a Muslim or
a Buddhist, we are not the judge of his religion, for every soul has a religion
particular to itself, and no one is entitled to judge its religion. There may be
a person in a very humble garb without any appearance of belief in God or of
piety or orthodoxy, and he may have a religion hidden in his heart, which not
everybody can understand. And there may be a person, who is highly evolved,
while his outward conduct, which alone manifests to people's view, may appear to
be altogether contrary to their own way of looking at things. They may accuse
him of being a materialist or an unbeliever, or someone who is far from God and
truth. And yet we do not know. Sometimes appearances are merely illusions;
behind them there may be hidden the deepest religious devotion, the highest
ideal, of which we know very little.
For the Sufi, therefore, the best thing is to respect a man's belief, whatever
it may be, his ideal, whatever it may be, his way of looking at life, even if it
be quite different from our own way of looking at it. It is this spirit of
tolerance that, when developed, will bring about the brotherhood which is the
essence of religion and the want of the day.
The idea "You are different and I am different, your religion is different and
my religion is different, your belief is different and my belief is different"
will only divide humanity. Those who, with the excuse of their great faith in
their own religion, hurt the feeling of another and divide humanity, whose
source and goal is the same, abuse religion, whatever be their faith.
The Message, at whatever period it came to the world, did not come to a certain
section of humanity. It did not come to raise only some few people, who perhaps
accepted the faith, the Message or a particular organized church. No, all these
things came afterwards. The rain does not fall in a certain land only, the sun
does not shine upon a certain country only. All that is from God is for all
souls. If they are worthy, they deserve it, it is their reward. If they are
unworthy, they are the more entitled to it.
Verily, blessing is for every soul, for every soul, whatever be his faith or
belief, belongs to God.
-oOo-