One should regard one's religious or denominational affiliation as a point of departure, a point of entry, not the point of arrival because on cannot confine God to a particular religion or faith tradition, and therefore should not claim one's exclusive ownership of God. Regarding one's religious or denominational affiliation as _accidentally_; not as _inevitability_, is important in religious discourse and practice because such a sense of _accidentally_ of one's affiliation allows a space of _altering_ of reciprocal contestation and challenge, and a space of planetary gaze that sees others as fellow human beings, _regardless_.
— Namsoon Kang
Cosmopolitan Theology: Reconstituting Planetary Hospitality
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