All religions were, at bottom, one, though they differed in detail and outward form like the leaves on a tree.
The essence of true religious teaching is that one should serve and befriend all.
Religions are different roads converging to the same point.
Religion is the tie that binds one to one’s Creator, and whilst the body perishes, as it has to, religion persists even after death.
Religion should be dearer than life itself.
Religion taught us to return good for evil.
Religion to be true must satisfy what may be termed humanitarian economics, that is, where the income and the expenditure balance each other.
A religious act cannot be performed with the aid of the bayonet or the bomb.
Religion is not like a house or a cloak which can be changed at will.
All religions teach that two opposite forces act upon us and the human endeavour consists in a series of eternal rejections and acceptances.
Purest religion is highest expediency. Many things are lawful but they are not all expedient.
Religion is no test of nationality, but a personal matter between man and his God.
Religions are not for separating men from one another, they are meant to bind them.
All religions are branches of the same mighty tree, but I must not change over from one branch to another for the sake of expediency.
No religion taught man to kill fellowmen because he held different opinions or was of another religion.
That religion and that nation will be blotted out of the face of the earth which pins its faith on injustice, untruth or violence.
It is a tragedy that religion for us means, today, nothing more than restrictions on food and drink, nothing more than adherence to absence of superiority and inferiority.
A religion cannot be sustained by the number of its lip-followers denying in their lives its tenets.
The highest fulfillment of religion requires a giving up of all possessions.
The external is in no way the essence of religion, but the external often proclaims the internal.