This brings up another interesting (IMHO) subject: Is praying to "someone else's God" actually respecting them, or disrespecting them? It is part of a larger question, along the lines of whether it is disrespectful to a religion to subscribe to selected portions of its canon.I have no problem speaking to anyone's "God" for them if they ask. .... Then I say a small prayer to their God for them.
We UUs do this, as a matter of course: We draw upon the canon of a wide variety of spiritual belief, capitalizing on whatever wisdom may be out there that is consistent with the principles of our faith. So in our basic prayer book, you may see some Psalms right out of the Old Testament, but other portions of the Old Testament would be considered inappropriate, because they reflect belief contrary to the principles of our faith.
In a way, from an external perspective, Christianity does this as well: Subscribing to some portions of the Old Testament but deliberately declaring some portions of the Old Testament as non-applicable to their faith.
If Hollywood is to be believed (and in this case, my understanding is that it was very accurate), Gandhi did this, "read[ing] from the Muslim Koran and the Hindu Gita, moving from one to the other as though it mattered not at all which book was read as long as God was worshipped."
I've done a little of this myself. I'm a UU Pantheist, though I was brought up Jewish, a Bar Mitzvah, etc. At the B'nai Mitvot of children in my family, I have been called to the torah. I appreciate the honor an aliyah represents, and say the prayers, even though they are not consistent with my faith. In the case of the aliyah, I say the prayers principally out of respect for (generally, the parents of) the Bar Mitzvah. At my mother's funeral, I prayed the Mourner's Kaddish, and will do so again at the unveiling of her monument. Again, I don't do this because I believe in the significance of the prayer, but rather because I believe in the significance of the prayer to (in this case) my mother -- it is a gesture of respect and love for her, not for the prayer or the belief system it comes from.
So I wonder what people think about this: Is saying a prayer that you don't necessarily "believe in" respectful, disrespectful, or does it depend on your underlying motivations, and if the latter, are some of the motivations I alluded to above acceptable, and other unacceptable?

