“His message (Martin Luther King Jr.) was just not a message for any one community — it transcended race and transcended just the Christian community,” said the Rev. Calvin R. Griffin, pastor of St. Luke’s Episcopal. “His example shows that peace, justice and equality is something that everyone has to work for regardless of their race, creed or faith.
“And that’s not ever going to work unless we learn to pray together, to worship together and to talk with each other.”
Called “A Service of Unity,” the hourlong service of prayer, readings, chants and songs was the result of a year of planning, Griffin said.
(A Christian is not supposed to pray to other gods nor worship other gods so why invite other religions to pray to false gods and worship their false gods at a service where the Christian prays to and worships the real God, the Father whose name is Yahweh or Jehovah, and whose son if Jesus Christ our Lord. There can be no unity of God, the Father with other gods because he will have no other gods before him.)
FULL STORY at http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1943