4. THE NEED FOR THE UNIFICATION OF RELIGIONS

1) There is One Absolute God

You are all hoping for what we call unification, aren't you? [Yes.] These days in the churches there are many denominations and they are always fighting about something, so they are shunned by society. Think about it. Religion acts centered on God, but how many Gods are there? How many Gods must there be? [There is one.] There is only one absolute God. There should be only one. But since there are the Presbyterian God, the Methodist God, the Holiness Church God, the Unification Church God, and some kind of Buddhist God, Confucian God, and the Muslim God, what is happening here?

Where people have forfeited the place of the absolute God and are worshipping relative denominational Gods, they can never know the fragrance of absolute value. That is the logical conclusion. Dreaming of the salvation of humankind, the ideal world, paradise on earth, or paradise in heaven through such religions is a joke. Perhaps the God of Islam may be truly asserted as one of the attributes of God, as a God revealing God's attributes; that would be possible. But it cannot replace the absolute God. There is room for only one absolute God.

Therefore in order to go before God who can be called the absolute God, it can be concluded that all religions must become one. Unless that happens, as the Last Days approach all will break down. Therefore, the one world with absolute values cannot come into existence through religions seeking relative gods. If one is standing within a religious realm having this kind of concept, it can be concluded that the religion cannot help being destined to be reformed. (121-143)