One Light, Many Lamps

What the World’s Religions Share—and Why Some Christians Fear It

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Estimated time to read:

5–8 minutes

I grew up in the shad­ow of the Appalachian hills, where church bells car­ried across hollers and faith was as much a part of the air as the woodsmoke curl­ing from a neighbor’s chim­ney. Sunday morn­ings meant starch-pressed dress­es, gospel singing, and the preach­er thump­ing his Bible loud enough to rat­tle the rafters.

We didn’t talk much about oth­er reli­gions back then. The world felt small, and we fig­ured we had all the answers tucked right there between Genesis and Revelation. But as I grew old­er, I began to meet peo­ple whose prayers sound­ed dif­fer­ent, whose holy books had oth­er names, and whose sto­ries of God felt just as sacred as the ones I’d heard in that lit­tle one-room church house that smelled like my grandfather’s peach chew­ing tobac­co and the pep­per­mints Sister Marie passed around to all the kids.

And the more I lis­tened, the more I rec­og­nized some­thing famil­iar — a thread run­ning through every faith like the moun­tain streams that weave through these val­leys. No mat­ter the name we give it, the heart of it is the same: Love your neigh­bor, seek peace, do what’s right even when it’s hard.

The Shared Language of the Soul

It turns out the Golden Rule wasn’t just writ­ten in red let­ters. It’s been whis­pered and sung and carved into the hearts of peo­ple all over this earth for thou­sands of years.

  • Christianity: “Do unto oth­ers as you would have them do unto you.”
  • Judaism: “What is hate­ful to you, do not do to your neighbor.”
  • Islam: “None of you tru­ly believes until he wish­es for his broth­er what he wish­es for himself.”
  • Hinduism: “This is the sum of duty: Do not do to oth­ers what would cause pain if done to you.”
  • Buddhism: “Treat not oth­ers in ways that you your­self would find hurtful.”
  • Pagan: “An it harm none, do what ye will.”

Different words, same melody. Each one car­ries the sound of mer­cy, humil­i­ty, and jus­tice — the kind of liv­ing that brings heav­en a lit­tle clos­er to earth.

And yet, some­where along the way, that shared tune has been drowned out by some­thing loud­er and sharp­er — the sound of fear and con­trol, dressed up as righteousness.

When Faith Turns to Flag

There’s a grow­ing move­ment in this coun­try called Christian nation­al­ism — the belief that our nation should be gov­erned by Christian laws, Christian lead­ers, and Christian iden­ti­ty. It’s a notion that con­fus­es faith with dom­i­nance, as if God need­ed to be defend­ed by gov­ern­ments or guard­ed by borders.

But that was nev­er the gospel I heard grow­ing up. Jesus didn’t climb a throne; he knelt to wash dusty feet. He didn’t build walls around his table; he made room for the out­cast, the for­eign­er, the sin­ner, and the poor.

If any­thing, he warned us about chas­ing pow­er. He knew it changes the heart, turns faith into a weapon, and love into lever­age. Every time reli­gion gets tan­gled up with pol­i­tics, some­body ends up hurt — and it’s usu­al­ly the ones already strug­gling to belong.

Christian nation­al­ism claims to pro­tect Christianity, but in truth, it betrays it. Because the minute we start believ­ing God favors one peo­ple or one nation above all oth­ers, we for­get that the Creator made us all from the same dust.

Fear Disguised as Faith

When I look at what’s dri­ving this push for dom­i­nance, I see fear — the same kind that’s haunt­ed these hills for gen­er­a­tions. Fear of los­ing what’s famil­iar. Fear of change. Fear of being wrong.

I think about my Great Gran’s Bible, the one with dog-eared pages and a pressed four leaf clover between the Psalms. Her faith was deep but qui­et. It wasn’t about prov­ing who was right; it was about liv­ing right. Feeding the hun­gry neigh­bor. Sitting with the griev­ing. Praying with­out need­ing to be seen doing it.

That kind of faith doesn’t fear dif­fer­ence. It lis­tens, learns, and trusts that truth is big­ger than any one tra­di­tion can hold. But some­where along the way, we’ve for­got­ten that humil­i­ty is holy too.

True faith doesn’t have to silence oth­ers just to feel sure of itself. It doesn’t crum­ble in the pres­ence of dif­fer­ence. Jesus nev­er did. Time and again, he lift­ed up the faith of out­siders — the Samaritan woman at the well, the Roman sol­dier who trust­ed his word, the Canaanite moth­er beg­ging heal­ing for her child. He crossed bor­ders and broke rules to remind folks that God’s love was nev­er meant to stop at the edge of any tribe or temple.

That’s the part of the gospel that still takes my breath away — how wide his table real­ly was.

History’s Warnings

History tells us what hap­pens when any reli­gion claims a monop­oly on truth. Empires rise and fall, wars are fought in God’s name, and the poor get tram­pled while the pow­er­ful preach purity.

When faith starts serv­ing pow­er instead of peo­ple, it los­es its soul. It becomes about win­ning rather than lov­ing. We’ve seen that sto­ry before — from the Crusades to the Inquisition to mod­ern-day extrem­ism. It’s the same old poi­son, just poured into a new cup.

And yet, faith itself isn’t the prob­lem. It’s what hap­pens when fear takes the pulpit.

Returning to the Heart of Faith

Maybe what we need now isn’t more preach­ing but more lis­ten­ing. More sit­ting togeth­er around the same table, break­ing bread and find­ing what we share instead of argu­ing about what divides us.

Because if you strip away the doc­trines, the titles, and the rit­u­als, most of us — Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Hindu, Pagan or none at all — want the same things. To love and be loved. To live in peace. To see our chil­dren grow up safe. To find mean­ing in the mys­tery of being alive.

That’s the qui­et truth that hums beneath every hymn and every chant — a shared long­ing for good­ness, for belong­ing, for light.

Maybe that’s what Jesus meant when he said, “The king­dom of God is with­in you.” It’s not con­fined to a church, a flag, or a set of laws. It lives in every act of mer­cy, every moment of grace, every time we choose com­pas­sion over judgment.

And if Christianity tru­ly wants to fol­low Christ, it needs to do what he did — break down bar­ri­ers, not build them. Serve, not rule. Heal, not harm.

Because faith that’s root­ed in love doesn’t need to con­quer to prove its worth. It just needs to live the mes­sage it preaches.

People of any faith — and even those who claim none — have a sacred duty to guard the free­dom of belief, not just for our­selves but for every­one. The minute one reli­gion tries to claim own­er­ship of a nation’s soul, it endan­gers the free­dom of all.

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The Light We All Carry

When I walk the hills that raised me now, I think about how every faith tra­di­tion is like a lamp on a long night. The shapes are dif­fer­ent — some carved, some plain, some shin­ing bright and some flick­er­ing low — but the light inside them is the same.

Rumi said, “The lamps are dif­fer­ent, but the Light is the same.” I believe that with all my heart.

The light is what we’re all reach­ing toward — the love that binds us, the good­ness that out­lasts us, the mys­tery that keeps call­ing us home.

Maybe if we spent less time fight­ing over whose lamp is right, we’d notice how bright the world can be when we let all that light shine together.

Faith, in the end, isn’t about con­quer­ing. It’s about lov­ing — and love doesn’t need a bor­der or a badge to be real. It just needs an open heart.

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