With all due respect, I would like to quote from a fellow peacemaker and Catholic layman, Joseph V. Montville, a director, diplomat, and essayist at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
In an essay entitled “Religion and Peacemaking,” Montville offers these words of profound wisdom and insight to ponder and meditate upon.:
"I have to admit that I cannot own God. I cannot demand of him that he act or reveal himself only as I know him through the tradition I have received. He remains free… He can reveal himself as he chooses.
Code:
I do not have the experience of knowing God through the tradition of the Muslim faith… But as I see the piety and the life of faith of the Muslim community—imperfect, of course, like my own—I find myself bound, even in faithfulness to God as he reveals himself in my own tradition, to recognize him at work in the faith of Muslims. This constitutes, I believe, no derogation of my Christian faith, but actually springs from it.
This is a wonderfully simple, and quite moving, statement of faith and it reveals a special problem for exclusivist doctrines in any religious system. Does any religion have a right to tell God whom he may embrace and whom he may not? "