So someone makes a claim, and if they share your faith and say that it proves your faith is correct, then you just accept it?
I thought you said we should verify things. You don't seem to have done that here.
There's so many variables in religion. People can say they believe in it, and in their head actually not believe much of it at all. And I got to believe, that someone that goes to the extreme of trying to believe all of their religion literally, really doesn't.
For me, I can't believe in any of them completely, literally or enough for me to say, "Ah, this one is true." Before knowing what it was to believe in some of the others, I was taught and learned about one. I believed and it worked for me. Then a friend told about his religion. And it contradicted what the other religion had said was true. I tried it. I let myself believe it and it worked for me... until I found reasons to doubt... and to question it. I talked to people in a third religion. A religion that both the others said was true, but that didn't accept them as true. I asked, "They believe your religion is true, but you don't believe in theirs... Why? And they told me, and I agreed with them. That they had good reasons not to believe in those others. But, for the same reasons they didn't believe in those others, I didn't believe in them.
All religions have some good reasons and some benefits for people to believe in them. But there's also good reasons not to believe in them. Like Baha'is say, most all of the major religions have similar beliefs about being good, loving people. But then they get into their "spiritual", unprovable claims and beliefs. And beliefs about how accurate, how literal, how true their Scriptures are. Anyone, if they wanted to, could poke holes in those beliefs. And religions poke holes in each other beliefs, because they are contradictory.
Now Baha'is say they accept all the other religions. But, then even they reject most all of the doctrines and beliefs of the other religions. So what's left? The very general things that most all people believe in... be nice, don't lie, love they neighbor kind of stuff. Well, who needs a God to tell us that those things are better than hating, killing, and being greedy, selfish people. And that's what Baha'is expect the other religions to do... To put aside those beliefs that divide us. Which, for the other religions, includes some major doctrinal beliefs. But Baha'is expect people to accept their unprovable spiritual beliefs as true.
Lots of good stuff in the Baha'i Faith, that I'm sure if applied would help people get along with each other much better. But they have to add in... That there guy, is not only the return of Christ but the return of every promised one of all religions. That all religions are one, but most of the laws of the Baha'i Faith sound like they came straight from Islam. For some people the Baha'i Faith sounds so reasonable, so practical. But everything in it? Everything they say? I don't think so. And I'm glad to see that people here, especially the Atheists, keep finding glitches in their beliefs... Things that they say and accept as true, but aren't provable, so they aren't "objectively" true.
And that's the problem with religions, even one like the Baha'i Faith... The believers feel as if they have to stand up for their religion, that, no matter what, it has to be shown to be true in everything they say. I hope there's some kind of all-loving, positive creative force out there, but I hope it isn't like the God of religion. And I hope that we are free to make choices that matter, real choices, and, if we make the wrong choice, to keep learning from our mistakes.