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Spiritual Essay: The One True Religion – Through the Lens of Kismatkarma

Dr Arti Jangra - Spiritual Guru, Founder of Kismatkarma

Comparative Chart of Major Religions

Religion

Core Belief About God

Path to Liberation / Salvation

Key Values / Teachings

Sacred Texts

Hinduism

Many forms of one Supreme Reality (Brahman)

Moksha through karma, bhakti, jnana, or dhyana

Dharma (righteousness), karma, non-attachment

Vedas, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita

Buddhism

No creator god; focuses on inner awakening

Nirvana through Eightfold Path and mindfulness

Non-violence, detachment, compassion, awareness

Tripitaka, Dhammapada

Jainism

No creator; universe is eternal

Liberation through asceticism, truth, and non-violence

Ahimsa, truthfulness, non-possession

Agamas

Sikhism

One formless, omnipresent God (Waheguru)

Liberation through remembrance of God, service, and humility

Equality, devotion, charity, truthfulness

Guru Granth Sahib

Christianity

One God, revealed through Jesus Christ

Salvation through faith in Jesus and God’s grace

Love, forgiveness, humility, compassion

Bible

Islam

One God (Allah), final prophet is Muhammad ﷺ

Submission to God, good deeds, following the Five Pillars

Justice, mercy, community, faith

Quran, Hadith

Judaism

One God, covenant with chosen people

Righteous living, obedience to God’s laws

Justice, faith, community, remembrance

Torah, Talmud

Taoism

The Tao as the formless, eternal way

Harmony with nature and Tao through simplicity and balance

Naturalness, spontaneity, balance

Tao Te Ching

Indigenous / Tribal

Spirits and ancestors guide the universe

Harmony with nature, honoring ancestors and cycles of life

Respect for nature, rituals, oral tradition

Oral traditions, symbols, myths


Spiritual Essay: The One True Religion – Through the Lens of Kismatkarma


"Truth is not in the label we wear, but in the light we carry within."

In a world adorned with diverse religions, sacred chants, prophets, temples, and texts, humanity continues its ancient and eternal quest: the search for truth.

Some seek truth in scriptures. Others find it in silence. Some bow before altars, others bow before the suffering of the world. Each path, each prayer, each practice—when offered with sincerity—becomes a step toward the Divine.

At Kismatkarma, we do not divide God by name. We do not measure truth by ritual. We honour all paths that awaken love, dissolve ego, and elevate the soul.


Religion as a Tool, Not a Cage

Religion was never meant to imprison the mind—it was created to liberate the soul. The rituals, mantras, and doctrines were always meant to be vessels, not walls.

If your religion teaches love, but you are filled with judgment, it has failed. If it preaches liberation, but binds you with fear—it has missed the point. True religion should help you transcend division, not deepen it.


Sanatana Dharma’s Eternal Wisdom

The essence of Sanatana Dharma, the timeless path, reminds us:

"Ekam sat viprā bahudhā vadanti" – "Truth is one, sages call it by many names." (Rig Veda 1.164.46)

Whether one says Om, Allah, Waheguru, or Amen, what matters is the vibration of the heart behind the word—not the word itself.


Kismat and Karma: The Twin Keys to Divine Realisation

In the teachings of Kismatkarma, we see a dynamic balance:

  • Kismat (destiny) brings us the conditions of our life.

  • Karma (action) gives us the tools to transcend them.

Religion, then, is not about blind acceptance of fate or doctrine—but about active transformation, the alchemy of turning life’s challenges into spiritual growth.


So, What Is the One True Religion?

The one true religion is consciousness.The one true practice is compassion.The one true temple is the heart.And the one true goal is union with the Divine, by any name or no name at all.

Let your path be your path. If it leads you toward more humility, more surrender, more service, more joy—then you are walking the way of truth.


Final Blessing from the Heart of Kismatkarma

May your faith not divide, but deepen. May your rituals not become routines, but revelations. And may your journey—whether called Hindu, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, or beyond—lead you always into the arms of the One who is in all.

 
 
 

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