15.10.12

The River Does Not Reject the Waters That Flow into It


Selfishness is rampant in the world. Ironically, however, the individual
is destroyed by this, and not just the individual, but those
around him and the nation as a whole. The greatest obstacle to
the world of peace is avarice in peoples’ hearts. It starts in individuals,
expands to the nation, and hearts stained with avarice cause division
and conflict at every level. Countless people throughout history have
shed blood and died in conflicts caused by avarice.
To eliminate such conflicts, we need a great revolution to change the
erroneous values and thinking that are widespread in the world today.
The complex problems our societies face today can be resolved quickly
if there is a revolution in peoples’ thinking. If each individual and nation
begins to look out for the other first, working together with the
other, the problems of modern society will be resolved.
Throughout my life, I dedicated myself to efforts for peace. Any
time the word “peace” comes up, I become emotional. I choke up, it
becomes difficult for me to swallow my food and tears begin to well up
in my eyes. It moves me deeply just to imagine the day when the world
becomes one and begins to enjoy peace. That is the nature of peace.
It links people who think differently, are of different races, and speak
different languages. Our hearts yearn for this world and harbor a hope
that it will be realized. Peace is concrete action; it is not a vague dream.
Building a movement for peace has not always been easy. There have
been many difficulties, and it has required large sums of money. I have
not done this for my own honor, nor to make money. All I did was invest
my full effort, so that we can have a world where a strong and true peace
takes root. For as long as I have been doing this work, I have never been
lonely. This is because, ultimately, peace is the desire of every person in
the world. It is strange, though. Even though everyone wants peace, it
has still not come.
It is easy to talk about peace. But to bring peace is not easy. This is
because people push aside the most elemental truth needed to bring
about a world of peace. They pretend not to know this truth is there.
Before we talk about peace among individuals or among nations, we
must talk about peace between ourselves and God.
Each religion today thinks of itself as the highest, rejecting and
looking down on other religions. It is not right to build fences against
other religions and denominations.
A religion is like a wide river flowing toward an ideal, peaceful
world. The river flows for long distances before it comes to the
wide expanse of peace. On its way, many streams flow into it. The
streams cease to be streams from the point they meet the river.
From that point, they, too, become part of the river. In this way,
they become one.
The river does not reject any of the streams that flow into it. It
accepts them all. It embraces all the streams and forms a single flow
as it continues toward the ocean. People in the world today do not
understand this simple truth. The streams that seek out the river and
flow into it are the numerous religions and denominations of today.
Each stream traces its origin to a different spring, but they are all going
to the same destination. They are seeking the ideal world overflowing
with peace.
Peace will never come to this earth unless we first tear down the
walls between religions. For thousands of years, religions have grown
in alliance with particular ethnic groups, and so they are surrounded
by high cultural walls. Tearing these down is an extremely difficult task.
For thousands of years, each religion has surrounded itself with such
high walls, insisting that it is the only correct religion. In some cases,
religions have expanded their influence and entered into conflicts and
fights with other religions, using God’s name in places that had nothing
to do with His will.
The will of God lies in peace. A world fragmented by differences in
nationality, race, and religion, where people attack and fight one another
and shed one another’s blood, is not what God wants. When we
shed blood and fight each other in His name, we only cause Him pain.
A world torn to shreds has been created out of the desires of people to
promote their own wealth and glory. It does not represent the will of
God. God clearly told me so. I am only His errand boy, receiving His
words and carrying them out on Earth.
The path to bring about a world of peace, in which religions and
races become united, has been exhausting. Many times, I was rejected
by people, or my own abilities fell short, but I could not put aside this
mission. When members and colleagues who worked with me would
cry out in anguish because of the difficulty of the task, I would even feel
envious of them.
“If you decide this path isn’t for you, you have the option to stop and
turn back,” I told them. “Or if you try and try and still can’t accomplish
it, you have the option to die trying.”
“But you should pity me,” I said. “I am a person with no such options.”
There are some two hundred countries in the world. For all these
countries to enjoy peace, the power of religion is absolutely necessary.
The power of religion is in the love that overflows from it. I am
a religious person whose role is to convey love, so it is natural that I
would work for world peace. There is no difference between Islam and
Christianity in their commitment to bring about a world of peace. In
America, I lead a movement for peace, bringing together twenty thousand
clergy who transcend denomination. Through this movement, we
discuss ways that Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and all faiths
can come together. We devote our full efforts to change the hardened
hearts of people.
My purpose is the same today as it was yesterday. It is to create one
world with God at the center, a world brought together like a single nation
without boundaries. All humanity will be citizens of this world, sharing a
culture of love. In such a world, there will be no possibility for division and
conflict. This will mark the beginning of a truly peaceful world.

Petition to governments of all countries to officially accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God | Petition to governments of all countries to accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God as messiah! | causes.com

7bt Petition to governments of all countries to accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God as messiah!

PETITION: Petition to governments of all countries to officially accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God

To: governments of all countries

Petition to governments of all countries to officially accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God and called by Jesus Christ to fulfill the mission of the Messiah, Savior and Lord of the Second Advent with the responsibility to establish the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth by 2013, January 13 Heavenly...SEE MORE
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Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God and called by Jesus Christ to fulfill the mission of the Messiah, Savior and Lord of the Second Advent with the responsibility to establish the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth
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    Petition to governments of all countries to accept Rev. Dr. Sun Myung Moon chosen by God as messiah! | causes.com


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    14.10.12

    Love will bring unification


    The Power of Religion to Turn People to Goodness

    On August 2, 1990, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein staged an
    armed invasion of Kuwait, igniting the possibility of war in
    the Persian Gulf. This area has long been a tinderbox, and I
    could see that the world was about to be swept up in the vortex of war.
    I concluded that Christian and Muslim leaders must meet to stop the
    conflict, and I acted immediately to do everything I could to stop a war
    in which innocent people were sure to die.
    On October 2 of the same year, I sent members of our church to
    Cairo to deliver my urgent message of peace to the highest spiritual
    authorities of the Middle East and the Muslim world. Many wondered
    why I, a person with no apparent ties to the Middle East, would convene
    such a meeting, but to me it is simple. I believe every religion should
    contribute to world peace. A conflict between Christianity and Islam
    would be far worse than the conflict between democracy and communism.
    There is nothing more fearful than religious war.
    I implored President George H.W. Bush through direct correspondence
    to avoid war in the Arab world, and instead work to realize
    Saddam Hussein’s retreat through diplomatic means. President Bush
    may have thought he was going to war against Iraq, but that is not
    how Muslims would think. In the mind of Muslims, religion exists in a
    higher position than the nation-state. I was very concerned that if Iraq
    were attacked, the Arab world would join in opposition to the United
    States and the Christian world.
    Our emergency conference in Cairo involved top Muslim leaders
    and grand muftis from nine countries, including the grand muftis of
    Syria and Yemen. At the core of the meeting was my desperate appeal to
    the Arab and Muslim world not to support Saddam Hussein’s claim that
    this was a holy war. Whether the United States won or Iraq won, what
    good would it do? What value would it have if it meant that bombs rained
    down, destroying houses, fields, hills, and precious innocent lives?
    The Cairo conference was just one of our many peace activities.
    Every time a crisis arose in the Middle East, our members worked fearlessly,
    risking their lives at the scenes of danger. For years, throughout
    the violence and terror in Israel and Palestine, our members, traveling at a
    moment’s notice, collaborated with major organizations to work for peace.
    I am always uneasy sending our members to places where their lives
    are at risk, but it is unavoidable when working for the cause of peace. I
    may be in Brazil tilling the soil or visiting refugee camps in Africa, but
    my heart is constantly drawn to those members who insist on working
    in the dangerous tinderbox called the Middle East. I pray that peace will
    come to the world quickly, so I no longer need to ask our members to
    go to such places of death.
    On September 11, 2001, we all felt utter horror when the World
    Trade Center twin towers in New York City were destroyed by terrorists.
    Some people said this was the inevitable clash of civilizations between
    Islam and Christianity. But my view is different. In their purest form,
    Islam and Christianity are not religions of conflict and confrontation.
    They both place importance on peace. In my view, it is bigoted to brand
    all Islam as radical, just as it is bigoted to say that Islam and Christianity
    are fundamentally different. The essence of religions is the same.
    Immediately following the collapse of the towers, I organized religious
    leaders from New York and around the country to pray and minister to the
    victims and first responders at Ground Zero. Then, in October, I convened
    a major interfaith conference for peace in New York City. Ours was the first
    international gathering in New York after the tragedy.
    These dramatic contributions to peace in times of war did not spring
    up from nothing. For decades, I have invested in promoting interreligious
    harmony. It is on the foundation of this investment that we have
    the trust of major faith leaders who would travel to Israel during the
    Intifada, or to New York in the wake of 9/11.
    In 1984, I brought together forty religious scholars, instructing
    them to compare the teachings that appear in the sacred texts of
    Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and other major world religions.
    The book that resulted from their efforts was World Scripture:
    A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts, published in 1991.
    What they found was that the sacred texts of religions convey
    the same or similar teachings more than 70 percent of the time.
    The remaining 30 percent are teachings that represent unique
    points of each religion. This means that most of the teachings
    of the major world religions are the same at their core. On the
    surface, some believers wear turbans, some wear prayer beads
    around their necks, others carry the cross, but they all seek the
    fundamental truths of the universe and try to understand the will
    of the Creator.
    People often become friends even if all they have in common is the
    same particular hobby. When two strangers meet and discover they have
    the same hometown, they can immediately communicate as if they had
    known each other for decades. So, it is truly tragic that religions, which
    share the same teachings more than 70 percent of the time, still struggle
    to understand each other and communicate happily. They could talk
    about the things they have in common and take each other by the hand.
    Instead, they emphasize their differences and criticize one another. All
    religions in the world talk about peace and love. Yet they fight each
    other over peace and love. Israel and Palestine talk of peace and justice, yet
    both countries practice violence until children are bleeding and dying.
    Judaism, the religion of Israel, is a religion of peace, and the same is
    true of Islam. Our experience when compiling World Scripture leads
    us to believe that it is not the religions of the world that are in error but
    the ways the faiths are taught. Bad teaching of faith brings prejudice,
    and prejudice leads to conflict. Muslims were branded terrorists after
    the 9/11 attack. But the vast majority of simple, believing families are
    peace-loving people, just like we.
    The late Yasser Arafat led the Palestinians for a long time. Like all
    political leaders, he had hoped for peace, but he was also associated
    with strife in the region. As chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization,
    Arafat embodied the determination for the Gaza Strip and
    the West Bank to become an independent Palestinian state. Many argue
    he shifted from his past associations and began to deter the activities of
    extremist organizations after he was elected president of the Palestinian
    National Authority in 1996. In the interest of seeking peace in the
    Middle East, I communicated with Arafat on twelve separate occasions.
    Of course, my words never wavered. God’s way is the way of harmony.
    The road to Arafat’s office was literally a difficult one. Anyone approaching
    his office had to pass between heavily armed guards and submit
    to at least three body searches along the way. But when our members
    arrived, Arafat, wearing his keffiyeh, would welcome them. These sorts
    of relationships cannot be built in a day or two. They come from the
    years when we poured out our sincerity and devotion for the sake of
    Middle East peace. It was our arduous efforts and constant willingness
    to risk our lives in terror-ridden conflict areas that prepared the way for
    us to be welcomed to relationships with the religious and political leaders
    at these levels. It took large amounts of resources. Finally, we could
    gain the trust of both Arafat and top Israeli leaders, which allowed us to
    play a mediating role during outbreaks of conflict in the Middle East.
    I first set foot in Jerusalem in 1965. This was before the Six Day War,
    and Jerusalem was still under Jordan’s territorial control. I went to the
    Mount of Olives, where Jesus shed tears of blood in prayer just prior to
    being taken to the court of Pontius Pilate. I put my hand on a 2,000-
    year-old olive tree that could have witnessed Jesus’ prayer that night. I
    put three nails in that tree, one for Judaism, one for Christianity, and
    one for Islam. I prayed for the day when these three families of faith
    would become one. World peace cannot come unless Judaism, Christianity,
    and Islam become one. Those three nails are still there.
    Judaism, Islam, and Christianity are sharply divided against each
    other in today’s world, but they share a common root. The issue that
    keeps them divided is their understanding of Jesus. To address this
    problem, on May 19, 2003, I asked that we de-emphasize the cross in
    relations among the Abrahamic faiths. Thus, we enacted a ceremony
    of taking down the cross. We brought a cross from America, a predominantly
    Christian culture, and buried it in the Field of Blood in
    Israel. This is the field that was bought with the thirty pieces of silver
    that Judas Iscariot received for the betrayal of Jesus that ended in Jesus’
    crucifixion.
    Later that year, on December 23, some 3,000 Ambassadors for Peace
    from all religions, and from around the world, joined with 17,000
    Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem’s Independence Park to symbolically
    remove the crown of thorns from the head of Jesus and replace it
    with a crown of peace. These 20,000 then marched for peace through
    Jerusalem city. Local authorities granted permissions and protected
    our efforts, and Palestinian families supported our march for peace by
    placing a light in front of their homes. Through that march, which was
    broadcast live via the Internet to the entire world, I proclaimed that
    Jesus had his authority as King of Peace restored to him. After centuries
    of misunderstanding and division, an opportunity was created for
    Christianity, Judaism, and Islam to reconcile with one another.
    Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest mosque in Islam after those
    in Mecca and Medina, is in Jerusalem. It is the spot from which the
    Prophet Mohammad is said to have ascended to heaven. Ours was
    the only mixed religious group welcomed to all parts of this house of
    worship. The mosque leaders guided the Christian and Jewish leaders
    who had participated in the peace march to the sacred spaces of the
    mosque. We opened a door that had been closed tightly, and prepared
    the way for many Muslim leaders to communicate at a new level with
    their Christian and Jewish brothers and sisters.
    Human beings like peace, but they also enjoy conflict. Human beings
    will take the most gentle of animals and make them fight. They will
    have roosters stand their crowns on end and peck each other with their
    sharp beaks until pieces of soft flesh begin to fall away. Then, people
    will turn around and tell their children, “Don’t fight with your friends.
    Play nice.” The fundamental reason that wars occur is not religion or
    race. It is connected to what lies deep inside human beings. People like
    to attribute the causes of armed conflicts to such things as science or
    the economy, but the actual fundamental problem lies within human
    beings ourselves.
    Religion’s role is to turn human beings toward goodness and eliminate
    their evil nature that finds enjoyment in fighting. Examine the major
    religions of the world. They all hold a peaceful world as their ideal.
    They all want to see a kingdom of heaven, utopia, or paradise. Religions
    have different names for this ideal, but they all seek such a world. There
    are numerous religions in the world, and virtually every one is divided
    into countless factions and denominations. But the essential hope for
    all is the same: They want the Kingdom of Heaven and a world of peace.
    The human heart has been torn to shreds by the violence and enmity at
    our core. The kingdom of love will heal it.



    The River Does Not Reject the WatersThat Flow into It

    Selfishness is rampant in the world. Ironically, however, the individual
    is destroyed by this, and not just the individual, but those
    around him and the nation as a whole. The greatest obstacle to
    the world of peace is avarice in peoples’ hearts. It starts in individuals,
    expands to the nation, and hearts stained with avarice cause division
    and conflict at every level. Countless people throughout history have
    shed blood and died in conflicts caused by avarice.
    To eliminate such conflicts, we need a great revolution to change the
    erroneous values and thinking that are widespread in the world today.
    The complex problems our societies face today can be resolved quickly
    if there is a revolution in peoples’ thinking. If each individual and nation
    begins to look out for the other first, working together with the
    other, the problems of modern society will be resolved.
    Throughout my life, I dedicated myself to efforts for peace. Any
    time the word “peace” comes up, I become emotional. I choke up, it
    becomes difficult for me to swallow my food and tears begin to well up
    in my eyes. It moves me deeply just to imagine the day when the world
    becomes one and begins to enjoy peace. That is the nature of peace.
    It links people who think differently, are of different races, and speak
    different languages. Our hearts yearn for this world and harbor a hope
    that it will be realized. Peace is concrete action; it is not a vague dream.
    Building a movement for peace has not always been easy. There have
    been many difficulties, and it has required large sums of money. I have
    not done this for my own honor, nor to make money. All I did was invest
    my full effort, so that we can have a world where a strong and true peace
    takes root. For as long as I have been doing this work, I have never been
    lonely. This is because, ultimately, peace is the desire of every person in
    the world. It is strange, though. Even though everyone wants peace, it
    has still not come.
    It is easy to talk about peace. But to bring peace is not easy. This is
    because people push aside the most elemental truth needed to bring
    about a world of peace. They pretend not to know this truth is there.
    Before we talk about peace among individuals or among nations, we
    must talk about peace between ourselves and God.
    Each religion today thinks of itself as the highest, rejecting and
    looking down on other religions. It is not right to build fences against
    other religions and denominations.
    A religion is like a wide river flowing toward an ideal, peaceful
    world. The river flows for long distances before it comes to the
    wide expanse of peace. On its way, many streams flow into it. The
    streams cease to be streams from the point they meet the river.
    From that point, they, too, become part of the river. In this way,
    they become one.
    The river does not reject any of the streams that flow into it. It
    accepts them all. It embraces all the streams and forms a single flow
    as it continues toward the ocean. People in the world today do not
    understand this simple truth. The streams that seek out the river and
    flow into it are the numerous religions and denominations of today.
    Each stream traces its origin to a different spring, but they are all going
    to the same destination. They are seeking the ideal world overflowing
    with peace.
    Peace will never come to this earth unless we first tear down the
    walls between religions. For thousands of years, religions have grown
    in alliance with particular ethnic groups, and so they are surrounded
    by high cultural walls. Tearing these down is an extremely difficult task.
    For thousands of years, each religion has surrounded itself with such
    high walls, insisting that it is the only correct religion. In some cases,
    religions have expanded their influence and entered into conflicts and
    fights with other religions, using God’s name in places that had nothing
    to do with His will.
    The will of God lies in peace. A world fragmented by differences in
    nationality, race, and religion, where people attack and fight one another
    and shed one another’s blood, is not what God wants. When we
    shed blood and fight each other in His name, we only cause Him pain.
    A world torn to shreds has been created out of the desires of people to
    promote their own wealth and glory. It does not represent the will of
    God. God clearly told me so. I am only His errand boy, receiving His
    words and carrying them out on Earth.
    The path to bring about a world of peace, in which religions and
    races become united, has been exhausting. Many times, I was rejected
    by people, or my own abilities fell short, but I could not put aside this
    mission. When members and colleagues who worked with me would
    cry out in anguish because of the difficulty of the task, I would even feel
    envious of them.
    “If you decide this path isn’t for you, you have the option to stop and
    turn back,” I told them. “Or if you try and try and still can’t accomplish
    it, you have the option to die trying.”
    “But you should pity me,” I said. “I am a person with no such options.”
    There are some two hundred countries in the world. For all these
    countries to enjoy peace, the power of religion is absolutely necessary.
    The power of religion is in the love that overflows from it. I am
    a religious person whose role is to convey love, so it is natural that I
    would work for world peace. There is no difference between Islam and
    Christianity in their commitment to bring about a world of peace. In
    America, I lead a movement for peace, bringing together twenty thousand
    clergy who transcend denomination. Through this movement, we
    discuss ways that Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and all faiths
    can come together. We devote our full efforts to change the hardened
    hearts of people.
    My purpose is the same today as it was yesterday. It is to create one
    world with God at the center, a world brought together like a single nation
    without boundaries. All humanity will be citizens of this world, sharing a
    culture of love. In such a world, there will be no possibility for division and
    conflict. This will mark the beginning of a truly peaceful world.