I think that most religions do not believe in what is written in their scriptures, but rather in what has been added to them. All religions advocate some form of charity, but in practice we fight against what is foreign to us because it is foreign to us. Religion is dominated by institutions that abuse the power of faith for the purpose of controlling people by not dealing with actual human emotional nature, but rather with a distorted version of it that serves mainly to justify hatred rather than love. As long as institutions have the material resources necessary to spread manipulative messages (propaganda), this cycle will probably not end. It makes no difference whether one is Christian, Muslim, or Jewish, because all these religions, and probably others as well, have been twisted by influential people to portray territorial expansion, ethnic exclusion, and material exploitation as something good that makes individual believers feel superior. Although this actually contradicts the logic of peaceful coexistence. However, I cannot yet fully answer the question of how to break this cycle, because history has shown that violent attempts often lead to an even more determined reaction from the other side. Perhaps it would simply help to take away the institutions’ material influence so that people would start thinking for themselves again and no longer need instruction from outside. I don’t know.
Sorry if this text sounds strange, I used machine translation, I wrote it in German.


I’d be very careful when saying “all religions” when you’re obviously talking about abrahamic religions, specially the dominant branches that survived, and glossing over all the variance between them and internally. Not all religions have institutions, hierarchies, scriptures or even moral guidance or justifications for the way of the world. And there have been multiple religious fractions even from Abrahamic religions who reframed it for opposition to oppression.
I’d recommend looking into how religions played a role in resistance all around the world against European colonisers, like Haiti, Peru, China. But it’s also a fun experience to read about random religions and legends from before that, get really confused, and fight the comfortable urge to understand it from a Latin-Christian perspective.