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In Christianity, the principle of love emerges from its teachings and controls the centre of life. In most churches, however, this has also become codified in terms of church law . This differs from one church to the next.
Fact File: excerpts from Catholic Church Law, 1983
Canon 212, § 2. “The Christian faithful are free to make known their needs, especially spiritual ones, and their desires to the pastors of the Church.”
Canon 749, § 1. “The Supreme Pontiff, in virtue of his office, possesses infallible teaching authority when, a supreme pastor and teacher of all the faithful, whose task is to confirm his fellow believers in the faith, he proclaims with a definitive act that a doctrine of faith and morals is to be held as such.”
Canon 1024. “Only a baptised male validly receives sacred ordination.”
Although the teachings of the respective religious traditions differ from each other, they have certain moral principles in common, even if the motivation for, or background assumptions of, these principles differs widely. We will now briefly look at a few of these common principles.
Neighbourly love
In nearly all the world's religions, personal morality begins with this simple concept: treat others as you would like them to treat you. This concept is known as the so–called Golden Rule and is perhaps the most basic of personal virtues.
Of course, the different faiths all have their own version of this universal message, but in essence the same directive applies. See the accompanying fact file for some examples from both religious system and from some non–religious sources:
Fact File: The Golden Rule in religion and philosophy
(Most of these examples come from www.religioustolerance.com
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