Human Values: The Common Ground Of All Religions

I see a crisis facing the world today. It is fundamentally one of identification. People identify themselves with limited charac­teristics such as gender, race, religion and nationality, forget­ting their basic identity as part of the universal spirit. These limited identifications lead to conflict on a personal level and globally.
Every individual is much more than the sum of these limited identifications. The highest identification we can make is that we are part of Divinity, and only secondly are we human beings and members of the human family. In divine creation, the whole of the human race is united.
Along with the proper identification of our true nature, we need to return to the values that are the essence of all major traditions. Religion has three aspects: values, rituals and symbols. The moral and spiritual values are common to all traditions, and the symbols and practices--those rituals and customs that form a way of life within a religion--are what distinguish one tradition from another and give each their charm. The symbols and practices are like a banana skin, and the spiritual values--the quest for truth and awareness of our divinity--are the banana. However, people in every tradition have thrown away the banana and are holding on to the skin!
This distinction between value and ritual and symbol was made in ancient times. The Sanskrit term smriti refers to those practices that are appro­priate to time and place, those things that are time-bound. Shruti refers to those values that are timeless.
In the right order of things, what is time-bound is sec­ondary to what is timeless, or eternal. However, in all the traditions, we find the order inverted. People tend to honor what is time-bound (the symbols and practices--those things which give them an individual identity) more than the values, which are timeless. Then fanaticism flourishes and the differences have to be defended. We can see this today in the wars taking place around the world in the name of religion. If we could focus on the values, the larger truth that the symbol represents, then most of the conflict in the world would be resolved.
Symbols vary between religions because they relate to the relative factors of location, environment and time. The crescent moon and star on the flag of Islam was chosen by people living in a desert region, where evening is a pleasant relief from the scorching heat of the day. The sun was chosen as a religious symbol in Japan and in Tibet where it gives welcome warmth and a feeling of eleva­tion. Symbols are relative, but they are intended to lead us to something beyond the symbol, to the essence of religion. We need to reach for the deeper values and not be distracted by the apparent differences.
Practices are also time-bound, dictating how you should dress, what name you are to take, what you can eat, how many wives you may have, how a person should be punished if they make some mistake. In all traditions you find practices like these that were necessary at the time they were instituted, but they may no longer serve a good purpose today. In the Koran , it is prescribed that if someone steals, their hand must be cut off. At one time a Christian who wanted to be religious had to take a vow of poverty. Jains were not allowed to touch money (this dilemma was solved by having someone accompany them to carry their money for them). Jews could do no work on the Sabbath. Those who follow this rule today cannot turn on a light switch.
Human values are social and ethical norms common to all cultures and societies as well as religions. They represent a melding of social progress, justice and spiritual growth.
The timeless values are:
- a deep caring for all life
- a responsible attitude toward the planet
- nonviolence
- compassion and love
- friendliness and compassion
- generosity and sharing
- integrity, honesty and sincerity
- moderation in one's activity
- service
- commitment and responsibility
- peace, contentment, enthusiasm
Much of the misery that has come into the world in the name of religion can be avoided by reintroducing these shared values. And it is not necessary to use guilt and fear to promote these values. You will find in the history of all the religious systems in the world that guilt and fear were used to control people, but such dis­cipline is not needed today. At this time we need only to culti­vate love and understanding.

(From the booklet, One God, One Truth, One World)

© The Art of Living Foundation