The World's Parliament of Religions has
become an accomplished fact, and the merciful Father has helped those who
laboured to bring it into existence, and crowned with success their most
unselfish labour.
My thanks to those noble souls whose
large hearts and love of truth first dreamed this wonderful dream and then
realised it. My thanks to the shower of liberal sentiments that has overflowed
this platform. My thanks to his enlightened audience for their uniform kindness
to me and for their appreciation of every thought that tends to smooth the
friction of religions. A few jarring notes were heard from time to time in this
harmony. My special thanks to them, for they have, by their striking contrast,
made general harmony the sweeter.
Much has been said of the common ground
of religious unity. I am not going just now to venture my own theory. But if
any one here hopes that this unity will come by the triumph of any one of the
religions and the destruction of the others, to him I say, “Brother, yours is
an impossible hope.” Do I wish that the Christian would become Hindu? God
forbid. Do I wish that the Hindu or Buddhist would become Christian? God
forbid.
The seed is put in the ground, and earth
and air and water are placed around it. Does the seed become the earth; or the
air, or the water? No. It becomes a plant, it develops after the law of its own
growth, assimilates the air, the earth, and the water, converts them into plant
substance, and grows into a plant.
Similar is the case with religion. The
Christian is not to become a Hindu or a Buddhist, nor a Hindu or a Buddhist to
become a Christian. But each must assimilate the spirit of the others and yet
preserve his individuality and grow according to his own law of growth.
If the Parliament of Religions has shown
anything to the world it is this: It has proved to the world that holiness,
purity and charity are not the exclusive possessions of any church in the
world, and that every system has produced men and women of the most exalted
character. In the face of this evidence, if anybody dreams of the exclusive
survival of his own religion and the destruction of the others, I pity him from
the bottom of my heart, and point out to him that upon the banner of every
religion will soon be written, in spite of resistance: "Help and not
Fight," "Assimilation and not Destruction," "Harmony and
Peace and not Dissension."
SOURCE: The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, Volume-1
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