At Oxford and Stonehenge, we will address unification and its opposing concept, conflict resolution. It is one world, and now we must address the parts that make up the whole.
Albert Einstein, along with every scientist and mathematician for thousands of years, searched for the Unified Field Theory as if it was the Holy Grail. It is simple to find if you look at Mathematics from the qualitative perspective rather than the quantitative. Mathematicians see one object and say "one," while from the qualitative perspective, theologians look at one world and see it is made of many parts.
If you think of God--the Creator of us all--as the old man on the throne perspective, you run into problems. If you think of God as "all that is," you can see that God is made up of many parts. We live in the Universe, and it is sentient.
Science and religion lean on each other. Each looks at "all that is" and tries to explain it, and one can do a better job of it at one time than the other. Scientists have searched for the Unified Field Theory but theologians already know it as God. This is where religion and science meet at the pinnacle of the mountain of understanding. One is coming from the west and one is from the south, like kings coming to Stonehenge.
Let's look at how to unify the religions to end the war in Iraq. Logically speaking, there is a duality that exists, but that is based on misunderstandings.
America prides itself as being a Christian nation, but the Christian's preferred power game is Pride, which leads to wars. Pride comes from the belief that you lack respect. Iraq and the rest of the Middle East is predominantly Muslim, and their game of Choice is Anger--lashing out when denied a voice, oftentimes to the point of violence. This is the root cause of Terrorism. If Christians don't stand on the principles, Muslims stand in protest, and if denied a voice, such as in the United Nations, they protest. The misunderstandings involved are that you can get respect by waging war, or a voice by killing innocent people.
Both these religions lean on each other. They share characteristics. They both address the need to solve problems, but from different perspectives. Christianity focuses on the principles of Creativity, and coming up with a plan, but the plan must benefit everyone or there is resistance. Islam focuses on the principles of Equality, and solving problems, and if the Christian's plan does not treat all people fairly and equally, they protest. Why create a plan if it doesn't solve the problems? Why force others to accept the plan without having a say in its creation?
The plan for the international government is being opened to debate, and everyone is being encouraged to participate in the debate. Our focus has been to look at the issues mankind is facing and seeing whether the plan is the solution to the crisis.