I can only speak from a Christian point of view here, as I know relatively little about Islam and other such religions, but I tend to think that in many cases, religion wouldn't cause so many problems if people would actually
follow it (IIRC, Gandhi, a Hindu, once claimed that if people would actually follow the techings of Jesus's Sermon on the Mount, by itself, the world would be a much better place). For example:
professor ganson wrote:But so often religion is the source of such intolerance, and even violence. Who cares if someone else doesn't have the same views as you?
"Return evil for evil to no one. Provide fine things in the sight of all men. If possible, as far as it depends upon you, be peaceable with all men." -Romans 12:17-18
Anyone with a Bible can look it up, but apparently few have done so, and even if they have, many ignore it. Being "tolerant" doesn't mean that you have to approve of absolutely everything that anyone does, or that you have to completely shut yourself up about your own beliefs, but it does mean realizing that you can't, and shouldn't try to, make others' decisions for them. Again, I know little about Islam, but I have heard of at least a few clerics trying to calm their fellow Muslims down about the cartoon furor by saying, in effect, "What would Muhammad have done in response to this? Would he have started ransacking and killing? How do you think this kind of action reflects upon his name?" If only more outstanding voices in all religions would say the same sort of thing...unfortunately, many of them have gotten mixed up in politics (which, incidentally, is spoken against in the Bible as well), and that pretty much automatically means compromising (if not outright abandoning) "spiritual" principles in favor of dealings which have nothing to do with the betterment of mankind as a whole.
I might have quoted this elsewhere on these forums someplace, I think Kofi Annan might have said it..."There is no need to rewrite the Bible. What needs to change is not the text, but the behavior of its disciples." I'd imagine the same might be said of many faiths, to some extent at least.