In today's world, it is always hard to know what to do and how to do it. And it is even harder for a group of people to come to any kind of meaningful consensus. Is the interfaith movement part of the problem of globalization or part of the solution? The president of the World Congress of Faiths examines this very question in great detail.
Marcus Braybrooke, an Anglican vicar, has been involved in interfaith work for forty years. He is president of the World Congress of Faiths, a Peace Councillor, and cofounder of the International Interfaith Centre at Oxford and of the Three Faiths Forum. His books include Pilgrimage of Hope, Faith and Interfaith in a Global Age, and three anthologies of meditations, Bridge of Stars, Lifelines, and 1,000 World Prayers. Braybrooke and his wife, Mary, visited Japan, including the headquarters of Rissho Kosei-kai, in 1993.