Past and Present Tense: A Muslims and A Christian

A muslim came to preach a christian while he was praying in a park. The muslim said, “you can pray in the church you know, it will give your heart more power.” The christian replied, “if your faith is true, you don’t run to churches, churches come running to your heart. then you can pray anywhere because covering distance takes time and you can use that to cover your prayers.”

“What are you praying for brother?” asked the muslim guy. “I am praying for religious freedom around the world so of all the curses, the curse of religious prejudice may not inflict humanity anymore.”

“Why your faith never gives freedom to others?” the christian asked. “Every faith needs a roof and a door because it is like a house, a home for faith keepers, we are waiting for our door, hoping that some day it will open and liberate us.” The christian said, “Does that mean you are going to keep your doors closed on others if you couldn’t find yours?” The muslim replied, “if that’s what we are doing, then we are too be blamed and we will be answerable to our prophet. if fault is ours then we are away from true salvation.”

“What truth then you and your children need to see then the simple fact you don’t offer faith freedom?” The christian asked with an intense tone. “Common sense is not found in common people, every body goes to their own grave, if it were in my hand, I would have turned Islamic laws upside down to make sure every one lives in faith of choice,” the muslim answered in a said voice.

“Seeing an innocent get hurt hurts me brother, but your nation will take all of humanity towards damnation. Once your prophet smelled fear from children from of a tribe, that tribe eventually murdered your prophet’s loved once. I smell the same from from muslims, but not for just one nation, but nation of all the faiths. “

The limits to they which they go to cover up the truth, human ego is not to be question, but the human intellect. Budhha was right, anger is like a holding a burning coal in your hand. Hazrat Ali taught the wrong lesson, because drinking away anger makes it sweet but only by throwing away the coal can one possibly be relieved from its pain.

Things said in anger eat away wisdom and things said in peace eat away the anger. If you’ll say the wrong thing, you’ll always be angry about it, if you’ll say the right thing, the consequence will feel sweet even if punishment. If you are not yourself, you always say the wrong things.

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