Religion comes in many shapes, colors, and languages. Each tradition uses its own words, rituals, and practices. But when I look past the surface, I see the same core ideas repeated over and over, just dressed differently. Whether it’s Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, or even the Law of Attraction, there’s a thread that runs through them all.
Ramadan, Fasting, and the Practice of Discipline
Take Ramadan, for instance. the ninth month on the Islamic calendar. Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. No food. No water. It’s a strict discipline that resets the mind, body, and spirit.
It’s not quite like biblical fasting, where the abstention could last for days without reprieve. With Ramadan, you can eat and drink at night, which some might liken to intermittent fasting. But spiritual fasting in any form is always about more than just food. It’s about focus. Sacrifice. Clarity.
Yet there’s always a way to “beat the system” if you want to. A fast with set hours can become routine. Disciplined, yes. But also predictable. It makes me wonder, is the spirit of the practice lost when it becomes mechanical?
Same Prayers, Different Tongues
The Bible says, “Whatever you ask in prayer, believing, you will receive.”
The Law of Attraction says, “Ask. Believe. Receive.”
Different words. Same principle.
In fact, many belief systems teach that our thoughts create reality. Speak it. Think it. Envision it. And it will manifest.
The power of belief is universal.
Rituals, Symbols, and the Sacred
In Catholicism, the Eucharist is a sacred ceremony. It’s deeply symbolic: incense fills the air, holy water is sprinkled, and the priest places a piece of bread on your tongue. The lighting is dim, the setting reverent.
To an outsider, it might resemble a mystical ritual, something ancient and ceremonial, similar to what you might see in witchcraft or manifestation rites. But again, the goal is the same: connection with the divine.
One Law with Many Names
Every tradition has some version of this:
What you do comes back to you.
- Christians call it sowing and reaping.
- Hindus and Buddhists call it karma.
- The secular world calls it cause and effect, or vibration.
The Golden Rule echoes it perfectly: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”
It’s everywhere — spoken in every language, in every tradition.
Cleanliness, Purity, and Discipline
“Cleanliness is next to godliness.” That phrase may not be a direct quote from the Bible, but the message is biblical. Christians are warned against drunkenness. Muslims abstain from alcohol altogether. Pork is considered unclean in both Islam and the Old Testament.
There’s a shared desire across cultures to separate from what corrupts, to seek purity—whether physical, spiritual, or mental.
Giving Power a Name
Everyone thanks someone. God. Allah. Buddha. The Universe. Divine Energy.
There’s always a higher power.
But I’ve come to wonder:
What if that higher power isn’t the one we elevate above ourselves?
What if the divine… is within?
The “I Am” Within Us
In the Bible, God tells Moses: “I am that I am.”
He was declaring himself the source, the essence of all being. But he was also saying something more profound: “I am whatever you say I am.”
Think about that.
When I say,
- “I am a mother.”
- “I am a survivor.”
- “I am love.”
- “I am enough.”
I am invoking divinity. That phrase — “I am” — is sacred. It’s power. It is creation. It is identity.
The spirit lives within. The answers are within. The power is within.
Positive Thinking and the Thought-Life Connection
Philippians tells us to think on things that are true, noble, lovely, and good.
Positive thinking teaches us to avoid toxic thoughts because they affect our lives.
It’s the same idea. Again.
The power of thought. The power of words. This is a universal law — not owned by one religion, but revealed in all of them.
Does Every Religion Have a Devil?
In Christianity, Satan plays a prominent role as the deceiver, the accuser. But I find myself asking: Do other religions have a “devil”?
Do Muslims have a Satan?
Does Buddhism have a devil figure?
Or is this idea of a singular dark enemy unique to Christianity?
That’s a question worth digging into.
Sometimes I think Christians give Satan too much credit. They attribute every hardship to him, giving him more power than he deserves. Maybe that’s precisely what he wants.
But perhaps the real enemy isn’t external at all.
Maybe it’s internal, fear, ego, anger, or doubt.
Even Atheism Holds a Place for God
Even an atheist, by declaring “There is no God,” acknowledges the idea of God.
They define their position in relation to Him.
It’s been said that there are no atheists on their deathbed. Maybe that’s true. Maybe not. But the instinct to reach for something beyond this life seems built into us.
Omnism: The Path of Many Roads
There’s a belief called Omnism — the idea that all religions hold some truth, that each one offers a piece of the divine puzzle.
They’re not all about clothes or dietary laws. They’re about how we think, how we act, and how we love.
Because love is another universal.
Love never fails. Love endures all things. Love makes the world go round.
Final Thoughts: The Universal “I Am”
In the end, I believe this:
There is one Spirit. One Energy. One Truth.
Many names. Many faces. Many paths.
But at the center of it all is the divine “I Am.” The one that lives within you and me.
You are the vessel.
You are the voice.
You are the I Am.