And the same holds true of religion. There are only two possibilities: only one religion is right or all of them are wrong.
I would word it differently, though still following your logic. As I see it, there are a few logical possibilities:
–one religion is entirely right and all others are at least partially wrong, while others still are almost
entirely wrong (Scientology, perhaps, would belong to the latter camp

)
–
no religion is entirely right, and all of them are at least partially wrong, but one of them is closer to being entirely right, than the others
–
no religion is entirely right, and all of them are at least partially wrong, but in different respects (for example, perhaps the Buddhists got karma and reincarnation right, while the Christians got belief in a personal God right; etc.)
–
no religion is entirely right, and all religions are entirely wrong (the Freud or the Dawkins view)
If there is a God, then the only ones who have it “completely and utterly wrong” are atheists.
That depends, it seems to me. If there is no “
personal God”, then the atheist is wrong in one respect (namely, that there is no God) and right in another respect (that there is no
personal God).
The atheist could be right about other things as well. For example, the believer might say, “if God exists, non-belief in the existence of God is a
grave error – perhaps the gravest-- on account of which eternal salvation is jeopardized.” In actuality, the existent God could say (in our terms), “belief in me is not required, and insistence on belief in me has wrought much havoc amongst yourselves, and created many false and artificial sources of division. A leaf does not need to believe in photosynthesis, to turn green” (that second line is not mine, but from a friend

).
Also, the atheist could say, “there is no survival of the personality after death”; while the believer, obviously, would tend to say, “there
is survival of the personality after death.” It could be that such afterlife as
does exist is so radically different than how we conceived it – including the form that the “survival of the personality takes” – that neither the atheist nor the believer was right, and – in a certain sense – the atheist was correct in rejecting all of the versions posited by the major world’s religions, and in positing that “you” (as you think of “you”) will indeed exist for this life only.
This could go on ad infinitum, as regards the resurrection of Jesus, the immaculate conception, the perpetual virginity of Mary, the assumption into heaven. The atheist could be wrong in positing that a higher power does not exist, but right in having rejecting any or all of these doctrines (perhaps he was wrong in having rejected some of them, right in having rejected others).
interreligious debates, it is more a question of who has the fullest understanding of God, not who is absolutely right and absolutely wrong. It is a precept of Catholicism that we should acknowledge the truth and beauty present in other religions; though, of course, we maintain the primacy of Christ and the fulfillment of all religions in Him.
That’s a mature attitude, it seems. Since “absolute, infallible truth” is the requirement for being “absolutely right,” it does seem plausible – to me – that no religion is likely to be either entirely right, *nor *entirely wrong. Personally, this is plausible to me only because the bar for being “right” is set so high, that it allows not even for a
smidgen of error or distortion.
Also, there may even be aspects of “truth” that all religions are ignorant of, and not even aware of as a
conception (not even having an
erroneous conception of it, but no conception at all).
So you could say, “this religion got things basically right, when it addressed them directly. But there are aspects of truth that it *never *addressed, and was completely ignorant of; it never even suspected their existence.”