A Call to Love One Another: The Universal Command at the Heart of Faith
If there is one teaching that appears everywhere, in every tradition, in every era, it is the call to love. Not sentimental love, but the disciplined, ethical, courageous love that reshapes societies. Judaism commands love of neighbor and love of the stranger—two categories that together encompass the entire human family. Christianity centers love as the very nature of God and the defining mark of discipleship: “By this everyone will know…” Love is not optional; it is identity. Islam teaches mercy as the first attribute of God and calls believers to embody that mercy in their dealings with others. Hinduism speaks of ahimsa —non-harm—as a form of love expressed through restraint, compassion, and recognition of the divine in all beings. Buddhism cultivates metta , loving-kindness, as a disciplined practice that expands outward from the self to all beings without exception. Sikhism teaches love through service ( seva ) and through the recognition that all people are equally wo...