RT Article T1 Contemporary Uses of the Golden Rule of Reciprocity in Abrahamic Interfaith Discourses JF Studies in religion VO 47 IS 1 SP 107 OP 136 A1 Untea, Ionut 1982- LA English PB Sage YR 2018 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1580857825 AB The second half of the twentieth and the beginning of the twenty-first centuries have witnessed a revival of the Golden Rule arguments in relation to the idea of religious toleration. Apologizing or acknowledging apologies for past mistakes, the Abrahamic religions have produced a series of texts inviting further ethical and theological discussions with the purpose of facilitating reconciliation and working to maintain a sustainable world peace. Inspired by three groundbreaking texts, Nostra Aetate (1965), Dabru Emet (2000), and A Common Word (2007), representatives of all three monotheisms have produced a number of important commentaries, responses, and critiques with the purpose of clarifying some key points that both unite and separate the interpretations, given the familiar look of common doctrinal and moral teachings. K1 A Common Word K1 Abrahamic monotheistic religions K1 Dabru Emet K1 Golden Rule K1 Nostra Aetate K1 Interfaith Dialogue K1 Reconciliation K1 Religious Tolerance DO 10.1177/0008429817721904