
 The One World Religion
              How it is coming 
                together and how it 
                relates to the return of Jesus.
              by 
                Dr. David R. Reagan
              
              
              The most popular apostasy in Christendom 
                today is the teaching that God has revealed Himself in many different 
                ways to different cultures and that, therefore, all religions 
                worship the same god, but just use different names. From this 
                viewpoint, the Allah of Islam is the same as the Yahweh of Judaism 
                and both are the same as the Krishna of Hinduism. The natural 
                conclusion that is drawn from this apostate idea is that there 
                are many different paths to God, Jesus being only one of them. 
                This has led liberal leaders of groups like The National Council 
                of Churches in the United States and the World Council to condemn 
                missionary activity as "arrogant" and "anti-cultural."1 
              
              The Bible teaches that these apostate Christian 
                leaders are eventually going to succeed, at least temporarily. 
                Their triumph will occur when the Antichrist forms his one world 
                religion (Revelation 13:12).
              	The Stanford Conference
              Major steps have already been taken to establish 
                a unified world religion. In June of 1997 over 200 delegates from 
                religious groups all over the world gathered at Stanford University 
                to begin drafting a charter for an international interfaith institution 
                to be called The Organization of United Religions.2
              The meeting was convened and presided over 
                by Reverend William Swing, the Episcopal Bishop of San Francisco. 
                Since 1993 he has been traveling worldwide to set up a network 
                of religious leaders interested in a one world religious organization. 
                The Bishop told the San Francisco Chronicle:3 
                
               
                 
                   
                    I’ve spent a lot of time praying with 
                      Brahmins, meditating with Hindus, and chanting with Buddhists. 
                      I feel I’ve been enormously enriched inwardly by exposure 
                      to these folks. I’ve gone back and read our own scriptures, 
                      and it’s amazing how they begin to read differently when 
                      you’re exposed to more truth from more people in other parts 
                      of the world.
                  
                
              
              This statement is the epitome of the new 
                tolerance that is being evidenced by Christendom’s apostate leaders. 
                (Incidentally, I wonder what "new truth" he found outside 
                the Bible!)
              The group has been moving full speed ahead 
                with their organizational efforts. Their charter was presented 
                for ratification by sponsoring groups in June of 2000. Their goal 
                is to have the new organization fully operable by 2005. They intend 
                for the headquarters to be located at the Presidio, the former 
                military base in San Francisco. As one conference leader put it, 
                "The UR is meant to be for religions what the UN is for nations."4
              	Continuing Apostasy in Melbourne
              In July 1997 many of the same people gathered 
                in Melbourne, Australia for a conference on religion and cultural 
                diversity. The Archbishop of Canterbury (the leader of the Church 
                of England) was present, and the Pope sent one of his highest 
                ranking cardinals, Francis Arinze.5
              At the opening banquet, the lights were 
                dimmed and people were told to focus on the candle on their table 
                while the following prayer was offered:6
               
                 
                   
                    Let us focus on the candle, the small 
                      quivering fire, the light in the darkness, the call to evening 
                      prayer, the call to thanksgiving . . . for our togetherness, 
                      for our unity as sons and daughters of the earth in this 
                      vast and ancient land, this sacred soil of the Dreamtime.
                    In the presence of the Ineffable Other, 
                      the Holy Being of Infinity, the Numinous Beyond, the One 
                      and the Ultimate, the Alpha and the Omega, the Unknown and 
                      the Unknowable, Lord of the Cosmos, Center of Creation . 
                      . . we pray to you . . .
                  
                
              
              Can you imagine any Christian leader praying 
                such claptrap? Since when, from a Christian viewpoint, has our 
                Creator God become "unknown and unknowable"? Only a 
                professing Christian captivated and deceived by the new tolerance 
                could pray such a blasphemous prayer.
              Understandably, the conference concluded 
                that the one cardinal sin is absolutism. Belief that one’s religion 
                contains absolute truth was decried as pride.7 
              The conference’s most popular workshop was 
                on "Religious Fundamentalism." The featured speaker 
                was an ordained Christian minister who, until recently, was the 
                full-time chaplain at the University of Melbourne. He denounced 
                Christians who believe in the Bible and embrace creationism as 
                "mean-spirited." He also called them "authoritarian 
                and dictatorial," "violent," "aggressive," 
                "pathological," and "dangerous." He characterized 
                them as people who are incapable of independent thinking and who 
                "brandish their floppy Bibles like weapons."8
              Talk about paving the way for the Antichrist! 
                I can hear him speaking now:8
               
                 
                   
                     
                       
                        It makes no difference what you 
                          call your god. He can be Yahweh or Baal or Allah or 
                          Krishna or Mother Earth or Self. Just give me your allegiance 
                          as your god’s Messiah, and I will guarantee your freedom 
                          to worship as you please. 
                      
                    
                  
                
              
              	The New Charter
              The URI Charter was ratified on June 26, 
                2000 at a meeting held at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, 
                Pennsylvania. The preamble states: "The URI is a growing 
                global community dedicated to promoting enduring, daily interfaith 
                cooperation, ending religiously motivated violence and creating 
                cultures of peace, justice and healing for the Earth and all living 
                beings."9
              It sounds so good! It is all 
                so touchy-feely and warm and fuzzy. The Charter is full of New 
                Age type statements like the following: "We unite to celebrate 
                the joy of blessings and the light of wisdom in both movement 
                and stillness."10
              One of the key principles expressed in the 
                Charter is worded as follows: "Members of the URI shall not 
                be coerced to participate in any ritual or be proselytized." 
                In other words, no member of the URI will engage in missionary 
                activity since that would constitute an act of spiritual imperialism. 
                It all makes sense from their viewpoint, since they believe all 
                religions are equally valid.
              The amazing thing is the degree of inclusiveness 
                that the URI represents. In addition to the world’s major faiths, 
                the organization has embraced "neo-pagan" religions 
                like Druids and Celtic Revivalists, Wicca and Witchcraft, and 
                Norse Paganism.
              	Deceptive Tolerance
              All of this is being done in the name of 
                "tolerance." But it is a perverted tolerance. It is 
                a subtle ploy of Satan to corrupt the Church from within. The 
                deception sounds so appealing: "Why draw lines of fellowship 
                over doctrinal differences? The only thing that’s important is 
                sincerity. Reach out and embrace all those who profess to believe 
                in God, regardless of who their god may be. Ignore doctrinal differences. 
                Do it in the name of Christian love. Do it for the sake of religious 
                unity."
              This type of thinking has led Earl Paulk 
                of Atlanta to call for the Evangelical Christian world to embrace 
                even the Mormons! It has motivated mainline liberal spokesmen 
                to advocate that Christians show tolerance toward Islam, Hinduism, 
                Buddhism, and other pagan faiths by restraining ourselves from 
                sharing the Gospel with them. Consider, for example, the following 
                words of Episcopal Bishop John Spong of New Jersey:11
               
                 
                   
                    In the fall of 1988, I worshipped 
                      God in a Buddhist temple. As the smell of incense filled 
                      the air, I knelt before three images of Buddha, feeling 
                      that the smoke could carry my prayers heavenward. It was 
                      for me a holy moment for I was certain that I was kneeling 
                      on holy ground ...
                    I will not make any further attempt 
                      to convert the Buddhist, the Jew, the Hindu or the Moslem. 
                      I am content to learn from them and to walk with them side 
                      by side toward the God who lives, I believe, beyond the 
                      images that bind and blind us.
                  
                
              
              Again, it all sounds so wonderful, so soothing, 
                so tolerant! Tragically, it makes a liar of the very person they 
                profess as Lord, for Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth, 
                and the life; no one comes to the Father, but through Me" 
                (John 14:6). Those are not tolerant words.
              	The Coming World Religion
              The Christian leaders who are advocating 
                tolerance to the point of embracing apostasy are going to triumph 
                in the near future, at least temporarily. The Bible makes that 
                clear. Just as "one world" thought is dominating the 
                political and economic scenes today, it has captivated the thinking 
                of both Catholic and Protestant leaders regarding religion.
              In that regard, I think it is significant 
                that in 1989 the Archbishop of the Anglican Church, Robert Runcie, 
                called for all Christians to accept the Pope as "a common 
                leader presiding in love." Runcie made his appeal at an evening 
                prayer service midway through his first official visit to the 
                Vatican. "For the universal church, I renew the plea," 
                he said. "Could not all Christians come to reconsider the 
                kind of primacy the bishop of Rome exercised with the early church, 
                ‘a presiding in love’ for the sake of the unity of the churches 
                in the diversity of their mission?"12
              That kind of thinking is paving the way 
                for the establishment of the one world government of the Antichrist 
                (Revelation 13:1-10) which will be supported by the one world 
                religious system of the False Prophet (Revelation 13:11-18).
              I believe the harlot church of Revelation 
                17 will most likely be an amalgamation of the world’s pagan religions, 
                including apostate Protestants, under the leadership of the Catholic 
                Church.
              * * * * * * * * * * *
              Notes:
               
              1. A good summary of the apostasy 
                of the World Council of Churches can be found on the Internet 
                at http://cnview.com/on_line_resources/world_council_of_churches.htm. 
                The article, written by M. H. Reynolds, is entitled "The 
                Truth about the WCC."
              2. William Norman Gregg, "Pagans 
                of the Word, Unite!" PropheZine, issue #46, August 
                15, 1997,
               http://www.best.com/~ray673/search/database/is46.2.htm.
              3. Ibid., p. 2.
              4. W. B. Howard, "The First 
                Religion and Cultural Diversity Conference, Melbourne, July 1997," 
                PropheZine, issue #46, August 15, 1997, http://www.prophezine.com/ 
                search/database/is46.3.htm, p. 15.
              5. Ibid., p.1.
              6. Ibid., p. 3.
              7. Ibid.
               8. Ibid., pp. 4-7.
              9. For detailed information about 
                the URI, see their website at http://www.united-religious.org.
              10. Ibid.
              11. The Voice, Diocese of 
                Newark, January 1989.
              12. Sunday Advocate, Baton 
                Rouge, LA, October 1, 1989, page 3A.